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Historical Biology
An International Journal of Paleobiology
Volume 27, 2015 - Issue 8
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Articles

Rediscovery of a lost Lagerstätte: a comparative analysis of the historical and recent Mare aux Songes dodo excavations on Mauritius

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Pages 1127-1140 | Received 17 Jun 2014, Accepted 15 Jul 2014, Published online: 05 Sep 2014
 

Abstract

The Mare aux Songes (MAS), Mauritius, Mascarene Islands, is best known for the remarkable quality and quantity of macro- and micro-fossil remains, including those of the iconic Dodo Raphus cucullatus. It remains the most productive oceanic island fossil locality in the Indian Ocean, and is considered an integrated vertebrate bone Konzentrat-Lagerstätte. Fossil remains were first discovered in September 1865, again in the 1890s and early 1900s, but all without contextual data. The discovery of additional fossil remains in 2005 initiated an international, interdisciplinary research programme in 2006, which resulted in the first contextual analysis. However, it became clearly apparent that the nineteenth- and early twentieth-century fossil collections differed both in taphonomy and in age from late twentieth- and twenty-first-century excavations, and that it was likely that each represented a different depositional setting. Here, we provide evidence for the genesis of the MAS and show that two different fossil deposits were indeed present, each differing significantly taphonomically. Furthermore, the historical material represents a younger, seasonally desiccated, lake-shore accumulation with age range from ca. 1600 yr bp to sub-recent, whereas the 4200-year-old twenty-first-century material is more associated with a deeper, lacustrine environment.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Robert Prŷs-Jones and two anonymous referees, whose comments improved the manuscript. The authors thank Ominicane, the Dodo Research Programme, the Mauritius Museums Council, Mauritius Institute and the Percy Sladen Centenary Fund for support and making this research possible. The authors thank Pieter Floore, coordinator of the Fort Frederik Hendrik excavations at Mauritius, and Alan Grihault for their support. The authors thank Christian Foo Kune and Marie Claire Foo Kune for providing permissions to dig in 2005 and their continuous logistical support during the excavations between 2005 and 2011.

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