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How Accurate are Paleoecological Reconstructions of Early Paleontological and Archaeological Sites?
Authors:Manuel Domínguez-Rodrigo  Charles M Musiba
Institution:1. Departamento de Prehistoria, Universidad Complutense, 28040, Madrid, Spain
2. Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado Denver, 1201 5th Avenue, Suite 270, Denver, CO, 80217, USA
Abstract:Paleoecology allows construction of paleoenvironmental models, faunal changes and evolutionary trends of paleontological taxa using modern analogs. However, when linking modern analogs to paleontological taxa in paleoecological reconstruction, differential taxonomic preservation in the fossil record has to be taken into account. Paleontologists have known the biased nature of the fossil record since Efremov’s publication on taphonomy in 1940, yet many ecological models of habitats associated with hominins in paleontological and archaeological sites in Africa and elsewhere barely address the complexity of the fossil record. We use randomly sampled ungulates from modern biomes in a comparative taxonomic abundance to demonstrate how the combination of modern thanatocoenoses and taphocoenoses, when used in reference to habitat-specific biocoenosis, produce better inferences of past habitats in paleontological and archaeological sites than approaches currently used.
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