Tytuł pozycji:
Osteometric analysis of scapula and humerus for Rangifer tarandus and Cervus elaphus:a contribution to the discrimination Late Pleistocene cervids
Fossil remains of reindeer (Rangifer tarandus) occurring outside their present range are an important indicator of
formerly cold climatic conditions, but are easily confused with those of the red deer (Cervus elaphus). The locality
of Kiputz IX has yielded one of the best-preserved Late Pleistocene reindeer populations of the southern Pyrenees,
occurring in association with Bison priscus and the much more abundant Cervus elaphus. Fossil remains from this site
are mostly complete and not affected by human intervention, thus creating the perfect conditions for reliable osteometric
analyses. Here, we quantify diagnostic morphological features of the scapula and the humerus of Cervus elaphus
and Rangifer tarandus to establish the potential of these bones to aid in interspecific discrimination. In the case of the
scapula, the best species discriminator is the ratio of the minimum anteroposterior diameter of the scapular neck and the
development of the articular process, while the breadth of the trochlea is the best discriminator in the case of the humerus.