Abstract
The La Brea Tar Pits, the world’s richest and most important Late Pleistocene fossil locality, offers unsurpassed insights into southern California’s past environments. Recent studies at Rancho La Brea document that insects serve as sensitive and valuable paleoecological and taphonomic indicators. Of the thousands of fossil bird and mammal bones recovered from the Tar Pits, insect trace damage is thus far almost exclusively confined to the foot bones of large herbivores, especially bison, camel, and horse species. Our laboratory experiments with dermestid and tenebrionid beetles establish that the larvae of both consume bone, producing different characteristic feeding traces and providing the first documentation that tenebrionids consume bone. The presence of carcass-exploiting insects in the Rancho La Brea biota provides insight into the taphonomy of the asphaltic bone masses and the environmental conditions under which they accumulated. The succession of dermestids, tenebrionids, and indeterminate traces on many of the foot elements, combined with the climate restrictions and life cycles of these insects, indicate that carcasses could remain unsubmerged for at least 17–20 weeks, thus providing the most reliable estimate to date. Attribution of these traces also suggests that the asphaltic fossils only accumulated during warmer intervals of the Late Pleistocene. Forensic studies need to reevaluate the role of tenebrionids in carcass decomposition and other additional insects that modify bone.
Highlights
The asphalt seeps of Rancho La Brea are the surface emanations of the Salt Lake Oilfield that trapped countless unwary animals during the course of the past 50,000 years
We conducted laboratory experiments with Dermestes maculatus and comparable experiments using the larvae of the tenebrionid genus Eleodes, which today occurs in Los Angeles and southern California and is represented by 17 species or subspecies from Rancho La Brea
Traces attributable to insect damage on fossil bird and mammal bones from Rancho La Brea are comparable to damage created by dermestids and tenebrionids on modern bone in our laboratory colonies
Summary
The asphalt seeps of Rancho La Brea are the surface emanations of the Salt Lake Oilfield that trapped countless unwary animals during the course of the past 50,000 years. The vents themselves remain liquid throughout the year, the surface asphalt spreads laterally from the vents and hardens in cooler temperatures. It only remains (or, after hardening, becomes) soft and sticky when the ambient temperature exceeds about 18uC This provides a lower temperature constraint for entrapment
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