Although amplified for dramatic effect in the movies, this cinematic convention is based upon fact. Some mammalian carnivores do create bone assemblages in caves, and through the fossil record we know that they have been doing so for millions of years. In fact, the bone-collecting habits of carnivores have proven to be a boon for paleontologists, creating assemblages which not only represent the animals which lived in the area, but also provide clues as to the interactions between predator and prey during the distant past.
One such monument is Srbsko Chlum-Komin Cave in the Czech Republic. Discovered in 1942, this Upper Pleistocene site was once a spotted hyena den, and the activities of these predators caused many of the over 3,500 large mammal bones to become preserved at the site. Over 350 elements from hyena skeletons, bone-filled coprolites (fossil feces), and tooth-marked bones identify the cave as a place where the prehistoric hyenas took parts of their prey in order to consume them in relative peace, but, as explained by paleontologist Cajus Diedrich in Quaternary International, this assemblage is not quite like the other fossil hyena dens found elsewhere in Europe.
Among the other fossil mammals found in Srbsko Chlum-Komin Cave are lions, the woolly rhinocerosCoelodonta antiquitatis, steppe bison, reindeer, and ibex, but the most prevalent mammal by far (represented by approximately 51 percent of the bones) is Przewalski’s horse. Portions of the horse’s skull and limbs are found here in a frequency considerably greater than in other known hyena den sites, and, despite what might be expected for carnivores known to chew and consume bone, relatively few of the horse bones show any sign of being gnawed on.
And there must have been a lot of horses, Diedrich hypothesizes, because if hyenas are able to frequently acquire meat they consume bone less often. Given the relative infrequency of toothmarked bone in the cave it would appear that the deposit represents a time when the hyenas caught and killed horses so frequently that meat was almost always on the menu. Determining the span of time during which the cave was occupied by hyenas is a difficult task, but it may be that it was inhabited seasonally during a time when there were plenty of horses to catch.
Spotted hyenas giggling over an antelope spine. If a hyena can rip off and easily carry part of a carcass, it will often try to take it away from the kill site to consume it. Courtesy BMC Ecology. |
Yet, even now and then, the hyenas probably did manage to drag a mostly-complete horse carcass into their den. Among the new fossils recovered from the Srbsko Chlum-Komin site is a skeleton of a fetal horse, and there is little doubt that it would have still been inside its mother when it died. Why it was never consumed is a mystery, but its presence in the cave appears to indicate that the hyenas dragged the body of a pregnant mare into the cave, ate the choicest bits of the body, and then left the rest.
The skeleton of a fetal horse found inside Srbsko Chlum-Komin Cave. From Diedrich 2010. |
Diedrich, C. (2010). Specialized horse killers in Europe: Foetal horse remains in the Late Pleistocene Srbsko Chlum-Komín Cave hyena den in the Bohemian Karst (Czech Republic) and actualistic comparisons to modern African spotted hyenas as zebra hunters Quaternary International DOI:10.1016/j.quaint.2010.01.023