2012
DOI: 10.1002/jqs.2594
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A Middle Devensian woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis) from Whitemoor Haye Quarry, Staffordshire (UK): palaeoenvironmental context and significance

Abstract: This paper reports the discovery of a rare partial skeleton of a woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis Blumenbach, 1799) and associated fauna from a low Pleistocene terrace of the River Tame at Whitemoor Haye, Staffordshire, UK. A study of the sedimentary deposits around the rhino skeleton and associated organic‐rich clasts containing pollen, plant and arthropod remains suggests that the animal was rapidly buried on a braided river floodplain surrounded by a predominantly treeless, herb‐rich grassland. Hi… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(23 citation statements)
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References 59 publications
(55 reference statements)
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“…These 'Lower Sands' yielded two OSL dates that Schreve et al (2013) considered reliable, which are 24±4 and 22±3 ka when calculated using standard corrections for moisture saturation (and thus comparable with the TVPP OSL dates reported above); the overlying 'Upper Gravels' likewise yielded two more apparently reliable OSL dates, of 15±2 and 11±2 ka. However, Schreve et al (2013) argued that these sediments had probably been water-saturated since deposition, requiring larger corrections for this effect, increasing the four calculated numerical ages to 39±6, 37±6, 28±4 and 19±3 ka, respectively. Furthermore, the two OSL dates for the 'Upper Gravels' are not in stratigraphic order; combining them gives weighted means (each plus-or-minus twice the standard error) of 13.0±2.8 ka or 22.2±3.4 ka, depending on choice of correction for water-saturation (Fig.…”
Section: Figure 7 Long Profile Projection Of the Upper And Middle Tresupporting
confidence: 75%
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“…These 'Lower Sands' yielded two OSL dates that Schreve et al (2013) considered reliable, which are 24±4 and 22±3 ka when calculated using standard corrections for moisture saturation (and thus comparable with the TVPP OSL dates reported above); the overlying 'Upper Gravels' likewise yielded two more apparently reliable OSL dates, of 15±2 and 11±2 ka. However, Schreve et al (2013) argued that these sediments had probably been water-saturated since deposition, requiring larger corrections for this effect, increasing the four calculated numerical ages to 39±6, 37±6, 28±4 and 19±3 ka, respectively. Furthermore, the two OSL dates for the 'Upper Gravels' are not in stratigraphic order; combining them gives weighted means (each plus-or-minus twice the standard error) of 13.0±2.8 ka or 22.2±3.4 ka, depending on choice of correction for water-saturation (Fig.…”
Section: Figure 7 Long Profile Projection Of the Upper And Middle Tresupporting
confidence: 75%
“…Given the stratigraphic complexity and the uncertainties in the available dating it is indeed possible that the fossiliferous sediments at Whitemoor Haye (and, potentially, also at Coleshill and Quorn) might be exhumed remnants of the Beeston Sand and Gravel or its counterparts, potentially also dating from the 'Denekamp Interstadial'; such an age would indeed be consistent with the older alternative age span for the OSL dates from the 'Lower Sands at Whitemoor Haye (Fig. 6), although Schreve et al (2013) favoured their radiocarbon dates over this interpretation of the OSL dating and thus assigned the C. antiquitatis occurrence at Whitemoor Haye earlier, to GI 12 (equivalent to the Hengelo Interstadial), which they placed at ~47 ka using Greenland ice core data. Pending resolution of the precise cause of the evident mismatches between radiocarbon and OSL dates, and any associated uncertainties in the stratigraphy, we adopt nominal ages of 25 ka and 21 ka for the phases of development of the Trent system depicted in Fig.…”
Section: Figure 7 Long Profile Projection Of the Upper And Middle Trementioning
confidence: 73%
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“…The only technique that can be used to measure the age of minerogenic (clastic) fluvial sediment directly is luminescence dating; variants of this technique have undergone many refinements in recent years and have been very widely used for dating the last exposure to daylight of sand grains in fluvial sediments (e.g., Murray and Wintle, 2000;Schokker et al, 2005;Briant et al, 2006;Briant and Bateman, 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 2009; Pawley et al, 2010;Schreve et al, 2013). Its range is dependant on natural radiation doses; in low-dose situations it can provide dates for quartz grains approaching 0.5 Ma (e.g., Pawley et al, 2010), with a promise of longer ranges from feldspar in the future (cf.…”
Section: Dating Fluvial Sedimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%