Upper Pleistocene Panthera leo spelaea (Goldfuss, 1810) skeleton remains from Praha-Podbaba and other lion finds from loess and river terrace sites in Central Bohemia (Czech Republic)

Historical finds of bone remains ofPanthera leo spelaea(Goldfuss) from the Upper Pleistocene loess open air site atPraha-Podbaba (Czech Republic) are reviewed. The largely complete cranium from Central Bohemia and finds fromother sites in Czech Republic are also described. The bone proportions of th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Bulletin of Geosciences
Main Author: Diedrich, Cajus G.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Digital Commons @ University of South Florida 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/kip_articles/5562
https://doi.org/10.3140/bull.geosci.2007.02.99
Description
Summary:Historical finds of bone remains ofPanthera leo spelaea(Goldfuss) from the Upper Pleistocene loess open air site atPraha-Podbaba (Czech Republic) are reviewed. The largely complete cranium from Central Bohemia and finds fromother sites in Czech Republic are also described. The bone proportions of the cranial and postcranial material fromPodbaba indicate them to have come from an adult male lion carcass. One foreleg and lower jaw belonged to an adult fe-male as evidenced by their much smaller proportions. A few additional bones were found at other loess pits around Prahaalong the Vltava River and at open air sites along the Berounka River close to Beroun. By undertaking a preliminaryoverview of these finds and other bones from cave sites in Central Bohemia, a first palaeobiogeographical distribution ofthese extinct carnivores can be presented. The lion remains from the open air sites, were found alongside the typical gla-cial cold-period macrofauna consisting of a fewMammuthus primigenius(Blumenbach), but mainlyCoelodontaantiquitatis(Blumenbach) bones, which were often well-chewed by Ice Age spotted hyenas. Other faunal remains werefound in the loess sites, and these appeared, in most cases, to be hyena prey depots or scavenging sites. These remains in-cludedBison priscus(Bojanus),Equus ferusBoddaert [partlyEquus przewalskii(Poljakoff)],Equus hemionus(Pallas),Rangifer tarandus(Linnaeus),Cervus elaphusLinnaeus,Capra ibex(Linnaeus) and rarelyRupricapra rupricapra(Linnaeus). The latter two animals indicate that an alpine fauna existed in Central Bohemia during the early and middleUpper Pleistocene. Some lion remains and locations described here may be of Saalian Age, during which a similar faunaexisted. The bone accumulations, including lion remains, are probably, in many cases, hyena prey deposits. Their pres-ence in caves seems to have been mainly the result of hyena and lion conflicts, and lion kills which were imported, oftenas complete carcasses, into the hyena cave dens such as the one at Srbsko Chlum-Komín. ...