Abstract

The Gruta da Furninha is a cave-site in Lower Jurassic limestones, of mainly marine genesis located at ~850 m SE of the Carvoeiro Cape, on the southern coast of the Peniche peninsula (central western mainland Portugal). The entrance gallery, situated in the middle of the cliff, is at ~15 m of altitude. This cave contained a rich and diverse fossiliferous set of Late Pleistocene vertebrates, distributed in several stratigraphic levels, currently housed at the Geological Museum of LNEG (Lisbon). The cave had a record of primitive human occupations documented by 106 Middle to Late Paleolithic artefacts, found in the lower lithostratigraphic unit (Pleistocene). It had also another human occupation in an upper unit (Neolithic, Holocene), where were found human skeleton elements and artefacts. This study focuses on two teeth previously identified as crocodile, housed in collections of the Geological Museum in the assemblages of the Furninha Cave and on a set of five bones, housed at Centro Português de Geo-História e Pré-História (CPGP) collected in a marine terrace in the Furninha cliff. The occurrence of crocodile remains in the Upper Pleistocene of Portugal is not consistent with the fossil record of this period or with the environmental conditions associated with the fully marine paleoenvironments around Furninha Cave. A more detailed analysis of these teeth and their stratigraphic location, now supports that they are cetacean teeth with ~80 ka, which is consistent with the fossil association, depositional environments and climate conditions of the Late Pleistocene in mainland Portugal. To add to these two teeth, in 2017 in sedimentary field work in the marine terraces on the cliffs of the Gruta da Furninha, at the level of 4 to 7 m, found five bones remains, which could be carpal bones of marine mammals.

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