Abstract

Taphonomic analyses of bone-surface modifications can provide key insights into past biotic involvement with animal remains, as well as elucidate the context(s) of other biostratinomic (pre-burial) processes, diagenesis, excavation, preparation and storage. Such analyses, however, first require researchers to rigorously disambiguate between continuums of damage morphologies prior to attributing individual marks to specific actors and effectors (e.g., carnivore tooth, stone tool cutting edge, etc.). To date, a number of bone-modifying agents have been identified, and criteria for identifying their traces have been published. Relatively little research, however, has focused on bone-surface modifications imparted during specimen preparation. Herein we report that air scribes, small pneumatic tools commonly used for preparation in museum contexts, can generate unintentional marks that may mimic surficial modification caused by carnivores. To aid investigators in assessing the hypothesis that a mark in question is derived from air-scribe preparation activities, we provide high-resolution, detailed morphological information imaged with scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The main diagnostic characteristic of air-scribe damage is the occurrence of sequential, variously spaced, sub-millimeter scallop-like stepped bone removals. This morphology can resemble damage imparted by carnivore teeth. In contrast to marks produced by trampling, stone tools and carnivores, however, no continuous internal features, such as linear microstriations, were observed within grooves produced by the air scribe. Thus, the presence of such features can be used to disprove an air-scribe origin. A culmination of the morphological criteria presented herein, cross-cutting relationships with other surficial features (e.g., diagenetic discoloration, weathering textures), the position of occurrence, and an overall contextual framework for the assemblage is suggested for accurate identification of such traces. The ability to recognize or disprove air-scribe damage will allow researchers to confidently proceed with interpreting past biological and sedimentological interactions with animal remains.

Highlights

  • Taphonomic analyses of bone-surface modifications can provide key insights into past biotic involvement with animal remains [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]

  • The experimental air-scribe-induced features were generated by a Chicago Pneumatic Air Scribe (CP9361) with an approximately 0.5 mm wide, pointed carbide tip on 26 non-diagnostic Pleistocene chelonian carapace fragments and mammalian bone remains from the Chalbi Basin, northern Kenya, which were exported for destructive geochemical analyses [36, 37]

  • The pits share a common, ‘rosette’-like morphology despite the amount or duration of applied pressure by the operator. This rosette appearance is caused by the repetitive removal of arcuate flakes that leave behind sub-millimeter scallops (Fig 3B and 3D)

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Summary

Introduction

Taphonomic analyses of bone-surface modifications can provide key insights into past biotic involvement with animal remains [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12] Such studies have proven invaluable in elucidating the diets and paleoecologies of insects, dinosaurs, mammalian carnivores, and Paleolithic hominins, among others [13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24]. Especially subtle and/or isolated traces, require further analysis prior to inferring agency, effector, and timing [27, 30]

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