Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7453315 | Quaternary International | 2010 | 23 Pages |
Abstract
The taxonomy and biostratigraphic significance of horses (Equus), deer (Capreolus, Dama, Cervus, Cervalces, Praemegaceros, Megaloceros) and pigs (Sus) from key British early Middle Pleistocene sites are investigated using a biometric approach. The sites compared are West Runton (type Cromerian), Pakefield, Little Oakley, Westbury-sub-Mendip, and Boxgrove. The samples include a significant amount of previously undescribed material. Stenonid horses dominate at Pakefield and West Runton, caballines at Westbury and Boxgrove, corresponding to the Mimomys/Arvicola division. The deer of Boxgrove include relatively large roe and small red deer, the latter distinguishing it from the Westbury Pink Breccia. The poorly-known giant deer Praemegaceros dawkinsi spans both the Mimomys (Little Oakley, Pakefield) and Arvicola (Boxgrove) zones of the Cromerian Complex. There is a marked shift in cervid abundance from predominant megacerines (Mimomys zone) to predominant red deer (Arvicola zone).
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
A.M. Lister, S.A. Parfitt, F.J. Owen, S.E. Collinge, M. Breda,