In 2000, archaeologists discovered the 300,000 to 400,000-year-old remains of three ancient elephants along with 87 stone tools at the Pampore in the Kashmir Valley, India. In a new paper in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews, researchers describe their discovery of elephant bone flakes which suggests that hominins struck the bones to extract marrow, an energy-dense fatty tissue. In a separate paper in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, they describe the elephant bones, which belong to the extinct straight-tusked elephant genus Palaeoloxodon.
To date, only one fossil hominin — the Narmada human — has ever been found on the Indian subcontinent.
Its mix of features from older and more recent hominin species indicate the Indian subcontinent must have played an important role in early human dispersal.
Prior to the fossil’s discovery in 1982, paleontologists only had stone tool artifacts to give a rough sketch of our ancestors’ presence on the subcontinent.
“So, the question is, who are these hominins? What are they doing on the landscape and are they going after big game or not?” said Dr. Advait Jukar, a curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Florida Museum of Natural History.
“Now we know for sure, at least in the Kashmir Valley, these hominins are eating elephants.”
The stone tools likely used for marrow extraction at the Pampore site were made with basalt, a type of rock not found in the local area.
Paleontologists believe the raw materials were brought from elsewhere before being fully knapped, or shaped, at the site.
Based on the method of construction, they concluded that the site and the tools were 300,000 to 400,000 years old.
Previously, the earliest evidence of butchery in India dated back less than ten thousand years.
“It might just be that people haven’t looked closely enough or are sampling in the wrong place,” Dr. Jukar said.
“But up until now, there hasn’t been any direct evidence of humans feeding on large animals in India.”
Most of the Pampore site’s elephant remains came from one mature male Palaeoloxodon.
The inside of its skull showed abnormal bone growth that likely resulted from a chronic sinus infection.
While it was clear that early humans exploited the carcass, there was no direct evidence of hunting, such as spear points lodged in the bones.
The hominins could have killed the elephant or simply found the carcass after it died of natural causes — weakened by its chronic sinus infection, the elephant could possibly have gotten stuck in the soft sediments near the Jhelum River, where paleontologists eventually found it.
The Palaeoloxodon skull is the most complete specimen of its genus found on the Indian subcontinent.
Researchers identified it as belonging to the extinct elephant Palaeoloxodon turkmenicus, fossils of which have only been found on one other occasion, in 1955. This earliest fossil was of a partial skull fragment from Turkmenistan.
While it looked different from other members of the genus Palaeoloxodon, there wasn’t enough material to determine with certainty whether it was, in fact, a separate species.
“The problem with Palaeoloxodon is that their teeth are largely indistinguishable between species,” Dr. Jukar said.
“So, if you find an isolated tooth, you really can’t tell what species of Palaeoloxodon it belongs to. You have to look at their skulls.”
Fortunately, the Pampore specimen’s hyoids — bones at the back of the throat that attach to the tongue — were still intact.
Palaeoloxodon originated in Africa about a million years ago before dispersing into Eurasia. Many species in the genus are known for having an unusually large forehead unlike that of any living elephant species, with a crest that that bulges out over their nostrils.
Earlier species of Palaeoloxodon from Africa, however, do not have the bulge.
Meanwhile, Palaeoloxodon turkmenicus is somewhere in between, with an expanded forehead with no crest.
“It shows this kind of intermediate stage in Palaeoloxodon evolution,” Dr. Jukar said.
“The specimen could help paleontologists fill in the story of how the genus migrated and evolved.”
Given that hominins have been eating meat for millions of years, the researchers suspect that a lot more evidence of butchery is simply waiting to be found.
“The thing I’ve come to realize after many years is that you just need a lot more effort to go and find the sites, and you need to essentially survey and collect everything,” Dr. Jukar said.
“Back in the day when people collected fossils, they only collected the good skulls or limb bones.”
“They didn’t collect all the shattered bone, which might be more indicative of flakes or breakage made by people.”
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Ghulam M. Bhat et al. 2024. Human exploitation of a straight-tusked elephant (Palaeoloxodon) in Middle Pleistocene deposits at Pampore, Kashmir, India. Quaternary Science Reviews 342: 108894; doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2024.108894
Advait M. Jukar et al. 2024. A remarkable Palaeoloxodon (Mammalia, Proboscidea) skull from the intermontane Kashmir Valley, India. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, published online October 11, 2024; doi: 10.1080/02724634.2024.2396821
This article is based on a press-release provided by the Florida Museum of Natural History.