The latest steppe mammoths (Mammuthus trogontherii (Pohlig)) and associated fauna on the Late Middle Pleistocene steppe at Nosak, Kostolac Basin, Northeastern Serbia
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2015
Authors
Dimitrijević, Vesna
Mrđić, Nemanja

Korać, Miomir

Chu, Seimi
Kostic, Dejan

Jovičić, Mladen

Blackwell, Bonnie A. B.
Article (Published version)

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In 2012, bones and tusks of mammoths and remains of other large mammals scattered in a line 130 m long have been discovered in the loess deposits at the Nosak mound in the Kostolac Basin (Northeastern Serbia). Preliminary analyses indicate that remains come from Mammuthus trogontherii, Equus ferus mosbachensis and Cervidae indet. Steppe mammoth remains originate from at least four individuals, three adults, and one juvenile. They include the largest steppe mammoth tusks ever reported. The mammalian remains were mostly found disarticulated, except for few articulated skeleton elements. Individual bones and teeth were encased within thick carbonate concretions. From their composition, morphology, and manner of formation, these carbonate concretions resemble the characteristic "loess dolls" that form in loess. Bones were exposed to subaerial weathering for some time before burial. Some damage on the bones indicates biogenic agents of their fragmentation and dispersal. Animals were probabl...y attracted to the spot by a water source in the vicinity, such as a spring or intermittent stream. The bones and teeth accumulated at a single level within the loess likely deposited in MIS 6, just above the upper of two paleosols formed during MIS 7. A sample from a mammoth molar plate has been ESR dated at 192 +/- 5 ka, correlating with the very early MIS 6, near the MIS 6/7 boundary. This makes the Nosak mammoth the most recent occurrence of steppe mammoths in Europe, and the sole find dated to MIS 6.
Keywords:
Serbia / Nosak / Mammuthus trogontherii / Loess / Late Middle Pleistocene / KostolacSource:
Quaternary International, 2015, 379, 14-27Publisher:
- Elsevier Ltd, Oxford
Funding / projects:
- US National Science FoundationNational Science Foundation (NSF) [ILI 9151111]
- Williams College, RFK Science Research Institute
- McMaster Nuclear Reactor
- Bioarchaeology of Ancient Europe: People, Animals and Plants in the Prehistory of Serbia (RS-47001)
- IRS - Viminacium, roman city and military legion camp - research of material and non-material of inhabitants by using the modern technologies of remote detection, geophysics, GIS, digitalisation and 3D visualisation (RS-47018)
DOI: 10.1016/j.quaint.2015.06.025
ISSN: 1040-6182
WoS: 000360652800003
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84940607507
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Археолошки институт / Institute of ArchaeologyTY - JOUR AU - Dimitrijević, Vesna AU - Mrđić, Nemanja AU - Korać, Miomir AU - Chu, Seimi AU - Kostic, Dejan AU - Jovičić, Mladen AU - Blackwell, Bonnie A. B. PY - 2015 UR - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/221 AB - In 2012, bones and tusks of mammoths and remains of other large mammals scattered in a line 130 m long have been discovered in the loess deposits at the Nosak mound in the Kostolac Basin (Northeastern Serbia). Preliminary analyses indicate that remains come from Mammuthus trogontherii, Equus ferus mosbachensis and Cervidae indet. Steppe mammoth remains originate from at least four individuals, three adults, and one juvenile. They include the largest steppe mammoth tusks ever reported. The mammalian remains were mostly found disarticulated, except for few articulated skeleton elements. Individual bones and teeth were encased within thick carbonate concretions. From their composition, morphology, and manner of formation, these carbonate concretions resemble the characteristic "loess dolls" that form in loess. Bones were exposed to subaerial weathering for some time before burial. Some damage on the bones indicates biogenic agents of their fragmentation and dispersal. Animals were probably attracted to the spot by a water source in the vicinity, such as a spring or intermittent stream. The bones and teeth accumulated at a single level within the loess likely deposited in MIS 6, just above the upper of two paleosols formed during MIS 7. A sample from a mammoth molar plate has been ESR dated at 192 +/- 5 ka, correlating with the very early MIS 6, near the MIS 6/7 boundary. This makes the Nosak mammoth the most recent occurrence of steppe mammoths in Europe, and the sole find dated to MIS 6. PB - Elsevier Ltd, Oxford T2 - Quaternary International T1 - The latest steppe mammoths (Mammuthus trogontherii (Pohlig)) and associated fauna on the Late Middle Pleistocene steppe at Nosak, Kostolac Basin, Northeastern Serbia EP - 27 SP - 14 VL - 379 DO - 10.1016/j.quaint.2015.06.025 ER -
@article{ author = "Dimitrijević, Vesna and Mrđić, Nemanja and Korać, Miomir and Chu, Seimi and Kostic, Dejan and Jovičić, Mladen and Blackwell, Bonnie A. B.", year = "2015", abstract = "In 2012, bones and tusks of mammoths and remains of other large mammals scattered in a line 130 m long have been discovered in the loess deposits at the Nosak mound in the Kostolac Basin (Northeastern Serbia). Preliminary analyses indicate that remains come from Mammuthus trogontherii, Equus ferus mosbachensis and Cervidae indet. Steppe mammoth remains originate from at least four individuals, three adults, and one juvenile. They include the largest steppe mammoth tusks ever reported. The mammalian remains were mostly found disarticulated, except for few articulated skeleton elements. Individual bones and teeth were encased within thick carbonate concretions. From their composition, morphology, and manner of formation, these carbonate concretions resemble the characteristic "loess dolls" that form in loess. Bones were exposed to subaerial weathering for some time before burial. Some damage on the bones indicates biogenic agents of their fragmentation and dispersal. Animals were probably attracted to the spot by a water source in the vicinity, such as a spring or intermittent stream. The bones and teeth accumulated at a single level within the loess likely deposited in MIS 6, just above the upper of two paleosols formed during MIS 7. A sample from a mammoth molar plate has been ESR dated at 192 +/- 5 ka, correlating with the very early MIS 6, near the MIS 6/7 boundary. This makes the Nosak mammoth the most recent occurrence of steppe mammoths in Europe, and the sole find dated to MIS 6.", publisher = "Elsevier Ltd, Oxford", journal = "Quaternary International", title = "The latest steppe mammoths (Mammuthus trogontherii (Pohlig)) and associated fauna on the Late Middle Pleistocene steppe at Nosak, Kostolac Basin, Northeastern Serbia", pages = "27-14", volume = "379", doi = "10.1016/j.quaint.2015.06.025" }
Dimitrijević, V., Mrđić, N., Korać, M., Chu, S., Kostic, D., Jovičić, M.,& Blackwell, B. A. B.. (2015). The latest steppe mammoths (Mammuthus trogontherii (Pohlig)) and associated fauna on the Late Middle Pleistocene steppe at Nosak, Kostolac Basin, Northeastern Serbia. in Quaternary International Elsevier Ltd, Oxford., 379, 14-27. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2015.06.025
Dimitrijević V, Mrđić N, Korać M, Chu S, Kostic D, Jovičić M, Blackwell BAB. The latest steppe mammoths (Mammuthus trogontherii (Pohlig)) and associated fauna on the Late Middle Pleistocene steppe at Nosak, Kostolac Basin, Northeastern Serbia. in Quaternary International. 2015;379:14-27. doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2015.06.025 .
Dimitrijević, Vesna, Mrđić, Nemanja, Korać, Miomir, Chu, Seimi, Kostic, Dejan, Jovičić, Mladen, Blackwell, Bonnie A. B., "The latest steppe mammoths (Mammuthus trogontherii (Pohlig)) and associated fauna on the Late Middle Pleistocene steppe at Nosak, Kostolac Basin, Northeastern Serbia" in Quaternary International, 379 (2015):14-27, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2015.06.025 . .