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Identifying remains of extinct kangaroos in Late Pleistocene deposits using collagen fingerprinting

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posted on 2023-04-27, 02:03 authored by Michael Buckley, Richard CosgroveRichard Cosgrove, Jillian GarveyJillian Garvey, Gavin J Prideaux
Our knowledge of past animal populations, including the geographical ranges of extinct species, has largely been derived from morphological analyses of skeletal fossil remains. However, a major barrier to the identification of the remains of extinct megafaunal species in archaeological and palaeontological sites is the highly fragmented nature of the material, which often precludes confident taxonomic identifications based on morphology. Biomolecular techniques are able to go beyond these limitations and are increasingly being used to make such identifications. Protein analysis offers a promising alternative to DNA techniques because they can be much cheaper, more amenable to high-throughput processing and work on much older specimens. Here we demonstrate the potential of collagen fingerprinting in an Australian context by extracting collagen from 50-ka kangaroo fossils from two caves in Tasmania, and identify several species including the extinct short-faced kangaroo Simosthenurus occidentalis. Importantly, of the five fossil bones sampled that had hitherto been ascribed morphology-based identifications below the family level, three had been incorrectly identified during an initial assessment of photographs taken in the field. Our results highlight the utility of using protein-based methods for making genus-level identification of marsupial bone, especially those that may form a basis for broader arguments such as that of late-surviving megafaunal species.

Funding

The laboratory analyses were funded by a Royal Society university research fellowship to M.B. (UF120473) as well as a NERC new investigator research grant (NE/K000799/1). The Australian Institute of Nuclear Science and Engineering (Award No. 01/037P), Australian Research Council DP120100580, La Trobe University Research Enhancement Fund and the Department of Anthropology University of Utah generously funded the Florentine River Valley megafauna project. J.G. acknowledges a La Trobe University Postdoctoral Fellowship.

History

Publication Date

2017-07-01

Journal

Journal of Quaternary Science

Volume

32

Issue

5

Pagination

8p. (p. 653-660)

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN

0267-8179

Rights Statement

© 2017 The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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