Neotaphonomic studies of large carnivores are used to create models in order to explain the formation of terrestrial vertebrate fossil faunas. The research reported here adds to the growing body of knowledge on the taphonomic consequences of large carnivore behavior in temperate habitats and has important implications for paleontology and archaeology. Using photo- and videotrap data, we were able to describe the consumption of 17 ungulate carcasses by wild brown bears (Ursus arctos arctos) ranging the Spanish Pyrenees. Further, we analyzed the taphonomic impact of these feeding bouts on the bones recovered from those carcasses. The general sequence of consumption that we charted starts with separation of a carcass's trunk; viscera are gener...
Arctotherium angustidens Gervais and Ameghino, 1880 (the South American giant short-faced bear) is k...
The morphology of both crowns and tooth-roots reflects dietary specialisation in mammalian carnivore...
During the late Pleistocene of North America (≈36,000 to 10,000 years ago), saber-toothed cats, Amer...
10.1371/journal.pone.0102457Neotaphonomic studies of large carnivores are used to create models in o...
<div><p>Neotaphonomic studies of large carnivores are used to create models in order to explain the ...
Neotaphonomic studies of large carnivores are used to create models in order to explain the formatio...
In this work we present data obtained from experiments with wild brown bears from the Cantabrian Mou...
Different agents can lead to similar damage patterns, and different causes can result in the same ty...
Like human groups, carnivores are able to act on the same faunal accumulation and generate important...
It has been suggested that cave bears had a vegetarian diet. They inhabited the deepest recesses of ...
Cave bears Ursus spelaeus are known from many limestone caves throughout the European Pleistocene. D...
During the late Pleistocene of North America (≈36,000 to 10,000 years ago), saber-toothed cats, Amer...
Cave bears, an extinct subgenus (Spelearctos) of Ursus, were versatile enough to inhabit large areas...
The cave bear Ursus spelaeus fossils remains are quite abundant in the Late Pleistocene site of Coro...
Carnivores are the main biological agents identified in the Upper Pleistocene assemblage of Cova del...
Arctotherium angustidens Gervais and Ameghino, 1880 (the South American giant short-faced bear) is k...
The morphology of both crowns and tooth-roots reflects dietary specialisation in mammalian carnivore...
During the late Pleistocene of North America (≈36,000 to 10,000 years ago), saber-toothed cats, Amer...
10.1371/journal.pone.0102457Neotaphonomic studies of large carnivores are used to create models in o...
<div><p>Neotaphonomic studies of large carnivores are used to create models in order to explain the ...
Neotaphonomic studies of large carnivores are used to create models in order to explain the formatio...
In this work we present data obtained from experiments with wild brown bears from the Cantabrian Mou...
Different agents can lead to similar damage patterns, and different causes can result in the same ty...
Like human groups, carnivores are able to act on the same faunal accumulation and generate important...
It has been suggested that cave bears had a vegetarian diet. They inhabited the deepest recesses of ...
Cave bears Ursus spelaeus are known from many limestone caves throughout the European Pleistocene. D...
During the late Pleistocene of North America (≈36,000 to 10,000 years ago), saber-toothed cats, Amer...
Cave bears, an extinct subgenus (Spelearctos) of Ursus, were versatile enough to inhabit large areas...
The cave bear Ursus spelaeus fossils remains are quite abundant in the Late Pleistocene site of Coro...
Carnivores are the main biological agents identified in the Upper Pleistocene assemblage of Cova del...
Arctotherium angustidens Gervais and Ameghino, 1880 (the South American giant short-faced bear) is k...
The morphology of both crowns and tooth-roots reflects dietary specialisation in mammalian carnivore...
During the late Pleistocene of North America (≈36,000 to 10,000 years ago), saber-toothed cats, Amer...