Damaged glyptodontid skulls from late pleistocene sites of northwestern venezuela: evidence of hunting by humans?

HIGHLIGHTS

  • who: Alfredo A. Carlini from the (UNIVERSITY) have published the research work: Damaged glyptodontid skulls from Late Pleistocene sites of northwestern Venezuela: evidence of hunting by humans?, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
  • what: The authors report novel visual and CT scanning analysis of six glyptodont skulls of Glyptotherium cf. cylindricum from these sites of which four exhibit distinct and similar patterns of breakages in the frontoparietal region that suggest intentional blows by direct percussion by humans with fractures not being diagenetic but instead antemortem or transmortem. The authors report novel evidence of human-glyptodont interactions from . . .

     

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