Review Article

Recycling of Badger/Fox Burrows in Late Pleistocene Loess by Hyenas at the Den Site Bad Wildungen-Biedensteg (NW, Germany): Woolly Rhinoceros Killers and Scavengers in a Mammoth Steppe Environment of Europe

Figure 14

(1)–(9). Lepus europaeus/timidus remains from the hyena open air prey deposit site Bad Wildungen-Biedensteg (Hesse, NW-Germany) possibly belonging to one individual. (1) Left maxillary with dentition (no. Bi-63h), ventral. (2) Right humerus fragment (no. Bi-63g), cranial. (3) Right radius fragment (no. Bi-63f), cranial. (4) Pelvis (no. Bi-63a), lateral. (5) Pelvis of Figure 4 with five articulated lumbar vertebrae (no. Bi-63a), dorsal. (6) Right femur (no. Bi-63b), cranial. (7) Right tibia (no. Bi-63d), cranial. (8) Left femur fragment (no. Bi-63c), cranial. (9) Right incomplete pedal skeleton (no. Bi-63e), cranial. (10) Spermophilus rufescens, skull with lower jaw (52/257), (a) dorsal, (b) lateral. (11)–(13) Pellets with frog and micromammal remains (Bi-52/243, 52/244, 52/245).
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