Intensive predepositional bone modification is described from fossil vertebrate remains. The bone material is derived from terrestrial Pliocene deposits exposed in the Laetoli area (Northern Tanzania), which represents predominantly vulcanoclastic material. The modifications described are shallow grooves with a U-shaped profile, as seen using scanning electron microscopy. The grooves form clusters of radially arranged grooves with 3–8 mm diameter that randomly cover bone surfaces forming broad surface erosion and lining subcortical cavities in the compact bone. Because of the paired arrangement of isolated grooves constituting the clusters, the modifications are attributed to yet unknown insects. Termites are tentatively suggested as possible producers of the marks.
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1 July 2000
Proposed Fossil Insect Modification to Fossil Mammalian Bone from Plio-Pleistocene Hominid-Bearing Deposits of Laetoli (Northern Tanzania)
Thomas M. Kaiser
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Annals of the Entomological Society of America
Vol. 93 • No. 4
July 2000
Vol. 93 • No. 4
July 2000
fossil bone
hominid locality
insect modification to bone
Laetoli
Pliocene
taphonomy