A contribution to tropical rain forest taphonomy: retrieval and documentation of chimpanzee remains from Kibale Forest, Uganda

The absence of Pan and Gorilla fossils from Africa has led some to suggest that African rain forests are not conducive to bone preservation. The absence of fossils is unfortunate as it hampers phylogenetic and socioecological interpretations on the divergence of the earliest hominids. For the most p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of human evolution 1993, Vol.25 (6), p.485-514
Hauptverfasser: Peterhans, Julian C.Kerbis, Wrangham, Richard W., Carter, Melinda L., Hauser, Marc D.
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container_end_page 514
container_issue 6
container_start_page 485
container_title Journal of human evolution
container_volume 25
creator Peterhans, Julian C.Kerbis
Wrangham, Richard W.
Carter, Melinda L.
Hauser, Marc D.
description The absence of Pan and Gorilla fossils from Africa has led some to suggest that African rain forests are not conducive to bone preservation. The absence of fossils is unfortunate as it hampers phylogenetic and socioecological interpretations on the divergence of the earliest hominids. For the most part, taphonomic studies have been restricted to cave and open country contexts. With this in mind, we have initiated a taphonomic project in a tropical rain forest, the Kibale Forest of western Uganda. In the course of bone gathering activities over the past 4 years, we have documented the retrieval of skeletal remains representing nine chimpanzees ( Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii). Crania and mandibles are most commonly recovered, followed by elements of the axial skeleton, and finally, appendages. Vertical segregation of small compact bones can occur in areas with a soft substrate. Scavenging activity suggests the role of suids, but this has not been proven. Geochemical tests suggest that Kibale soils are neutral and may be conducive to bone preservation. Our independent preliminary data from bone weathering/survival experiments indicate that bones appear undamaged after several years and are able to accumulate on the forest floor. These results contrast with popular assumptions on the potential of African rain forests as potential fossil reservoirs.
doi_str_mv 10.1006/jhev.1993.1063
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subjects Chimpanzees, taphonomy, Kibale Forest, paleoanthropology
Documentation
Forests
Primates
Uganda
title A contribution to tropical rain forest taphonomy: retrieval and documentation of chimpanzee remains from Kibale Forest, Uganda
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