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Large Pleistocene tortoise tracks on the Cape south coast of South Africa

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posted on 2022-12-09, 16:22 authored by CW Helm, Andrew Carr, HC Cawthra, JC De Vynck, MG Dixon, MG Lockley, W Stear, JA Venter
Although tortoises (Testudinidae) are a familiar clade of reptiles, with a body fossil record extending to at least the Eocene, hitherto no tortoise ichnosites have been described. Here, a number of sites attributed to tortoise trackmakers are identified within Pleistocene aeolianites on South Africa’s Cape south coast. These date from late Marine Isotope Stage 6 to Marine Isotope Stage 4. The findings indicate large trackmakers, with evidence of a trackmaker length of more than a metre, substantially longer than the largest extant tortoises in southern Africa. This suggests either the presence of an extinct very large tortoise species, or that Pleistocene leopard tortoises in the region were larger than their descendants. Variations in substrate properties are responsible for a variety of track- and trace forms. A mismatch exists between the reported ichnological evidence for large tortoises, and the regional archaeological and body fossil record, which almost exclusively comprises smaller tortoises. The findings illustrate the potential of ichnology to complement and augment the paleontological and archaeological record.

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Citation

Helm, C., Carr, A., Cawthra, H., De Vynck, J., Dixon, M., Lockley, M., Venter, J. (2022). Large Pleistocene tortoise tracks on the Cape south coast of South Africa. Quaternary Research, 1-18. doi:10.1017/qua.2022.50

Author affiliation

School of Geography, Geology and the Environment

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  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Quaternary Research

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

issn

0033-5894

Acceptance date

2022-08-23

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-12-09

Language

en

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