Author, as appears in the article.: Fidalgo, D; Rosas, A; Madurell-Malapeira, J; Pineda, A; Huguet, R; García-Tabernero, A; Cáceres, I; Ollé, A; Vallverdú, J; Saladie, P
Department: Història i Història de l'Art
URV's Author/s: Cáceres Cuello de Oro, Isabel / Huguet Pàmies, Rosa / Ollé Cañellas, Andreu / Saladié Ballesté, Palmira / Vallverdú Poch, Josep
Keywords: Quaternary Palaeobiogeography Middle pleistocene Hippopotamus Geometric morphometrics Europe skull site peninsula palaeobiogeography large mammals hippopotamus geometric morphometrics europe dispersal biochronology assemblages anatomy
Abstract: The study of European Pleistocene Hippopotamus presents unresolved questions and a lack of consensus among specialists being matter of hotly debate in the last decades. The number of taxa, their geographical and chronological distribution and their palaeobiological affinities are still under evaluation. The present work presents the results of comparative analyses using descriptive anatomy, linear biometry and geometric morphometrics of Hippopotamus specimens found in the archaeopalaeontological outcrops of the Barranc de la Boella Section (Francolí Basin, NE Iberian Peninsula) and other coeval European sites in the context of the record of the genus Hippopotamus in Europe and its putative migrations from Africa. The deposits from Barranc de la Boella Section documented for the first time the presence of hominids with Acheulian technology and hippos roughly coinciding with the Early-Middle Pleistocene Transition (EMPT), one of the periods with strongest climate asymmetry throughout the Pleistocene. The evaluation of the studied specimens and the other European record favor the consideration of Hippopotamus antiquus as the only taxon of its family present in Europe from the Early Pleistocene (ca. 2.1 Ma) to the mid-Middle Pleistocene (ca. 0.4 Ma), when the extant species (Hippopotamus amphibius) dispersed from Africa. Even so, there is a need for a more detailed understanding of the large intraspecific variability and sexual dimorphism reported within the genus Hippopotamus to characterise the phenotype of individuals in its populations across different chronologies, geographic locations, and environmental conditions. The detailed review of the distribution of H. antiquus during the EMPT raises the possibility that the Iberian and Italic peninsulas acted as climatic refugia for its populations strongly dependents of the aquatic environment during the coldest climatic stages (e.g. MIS 22).
Thematic Areas: Interdisciplinar Historia y filosofía de la ciencia Historia Global and planetary change Geosciences, multidisciplinary Geosciences, interdisciplinary Geology Geography, physical Geociências Ecology, evolution, behavior and systematics Ciencias sociales Ciencias humanas Ciências biológicas i Ciências ambientais Ciências agrárias i Biotecnología Biodiversidade Archeology (arts and humanities) Archeology Archaeology
licence for use: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
Author's mail: palmira.saladie@urv.cat rosa.huguet@urv.cat andreu.olle@urv.cat josep.vallverdup@urv.cat isabel.caceres@urv.cat
Author identifier: 0000-0002-1730-8461 0000-0002-1750-6249 0000-0002-8643-5536 0000-0002-3177-3263 0000-0001-8487-2591
Record's date: 2024-08-03
Papper version: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Link to the original source: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379123000823
Licence document URL: https://repositori.urv.cat/ca/proteccio-de-dades/
Papper original source: Quaternary Science Reviews. 307
APA: Fidalgo, D; Rosas, A; Madurell-Malapeira, J; Pineda, A; Huguet, R; García-Tabernero, A; Cáceres, I; Ollé, A; Vallverdú, J; Saladie, P (2023). A review on the Pleistocene occurrences and palaeobiology of Hippopotamus antiquus based on the record from the Barranc de la Boella Section (Francolí Basin, NE Iberia). Quaternary Science Reviews, 307(), -. DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2023.108034
Article's DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2023.108034
Entity: Universitat Rovira i Virgili
Journal publication year: 2023
Publication Type: Journal Publications