Scientists at the University of Malaga have shown, in an unprecedented way, how the so-called “elephant graveyard” of the Early Pleistocene archaeological site of Orce—a name given due to the amount of remains of the extinct elephant species Mammuthus meridionalis that it contained—hid a natural trap in quicksand. Scientists at the University of Malaga have shown, in an unprecedented way, how the so-called “elephant graveyard” of the Early Pleistocene archaeological site of Orce—a name given due to the amount of remains of the extinct elephant species Mammuthus meridionalis that it contained—hid a natural trap in quicksand. Ecology Phys.org – latest science and technology news stories
Scientists find a natural quicksand trap dated to more than one million years ago in the ‘elephant graveyard’ of Orce
