2026-03-16 ゲーテ大学
<関連情報>
- https://aktuelles.uni-frankfurt.de/english/hunted-by-neanderthals-giant-elephants-traveled-hundreds-of-kilometers-across-ice-age-europe/
- https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adz0114
ノイマルク・ノルト遺跡(約12万5千年前)の最終間氷期ネアンデルタール人遺跡から発見された、まっすぐな牙を持つゾウの生活史 Life histories of straight-tusked elephants from the Last Interglacial Neanderthal site of Neumark-Nord (~125 ka)
Elena Armaroli, Federico Lugli, Théo Tacail, Lutz Kindler, […] , and Wolfgang Müller
Science Advances Published:13 Mar 2026

Abstract
Straight-tusked elephants (Palaeoloxodon antiquus) were the largest land mammals of the European Pleistocene. Abundant fossil remains have been recovered from Neumark-Nord [~125 thousand years ago (ka); Saxony-Anhalt, NE Germany], where over 70 individuals were accumulated by Neanderthal hunting and butchering activity. This study reconstructs the species’ paleoecology using a multiproxy approach that combines isotopic and paleoproteomic analyses of tooth enamel. LA-MC-ICPMS 87Sr/86Sr analyses on molar cross sections from four adults reveal subseasonal mobility over periods up to eight years. A specifically developed Sr isoscape facilitates tracking of elephant movements, using Bayesian analysis to map their Last Interglacial homerange. Amelogenin proteomic analysis identified three males and one likely female. Two male elephants exhibit elevated 87Sr/86Sr profiles, distinct from the local bioavailable ratios. Intra-tooth δ13C and δ18O analyses provide insights into paleodiet and drinking water sources, differing between individuals with low and elevated 87Sr/86Sr. The latter likely foraged up to 300 km away before arriving at Neumark-Nord, where they were ultimately killed and processed by Neanderthals.


