Institut des Sciences de l'Évolution, UMR-CNRS 5554, CC064, Université Montpellier 2, Montpellier, France.
PLoS One. 2012;7(11):e49997. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0049997. Epub 2012 Nov 21.
Preservation of fossil vertebrates in volcanic rocks is extremely rare. An articulated skull (cranium and mandible) of a rhinoceros was found in a 9.2±0.1 Ma-old ignimbrite of Cappadocia, Central Turkey. The unusual aspect of the preserved hard tissues of the skull (rough bone surface and brittle dentine) allows suspecting a peri-mortem exposure to a heating source.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here we describe and identify the skull as belonging to the large two-horned rhinocerotine Ceratotherium neumayri, well-known in the late Miocene of the Eastern Mediterranean Province. Gross structural features and microscopic changes of hard tissues (bones and teeth) are then monitored and compared to the results of forensic and archaeological studies and experiments focusing on heating effects, in order to reconstruct the hypothetical peri-mortem conditions. Macroscopic and microscopic structural changes on compact bones (canaliculi and lamellae vanished), as well as partial dentine/cementum disintegration, drastic enamel-dentine disjunctions or microscopic cracks affecting all hard dental tissues (enamel, cementum, and dentine) point to continued exposures to temperatures around 400-450°C. Comparison to other cases of preservation of fossil vertebrates within volcanic rocks points unambiguously to some similarity with the 79 AD Plinian eruption of the Vesuvius, in Italy.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: A 9.2±0.1 Ma-old pyroclastic density current, sourced from the Çardak caldera, likely provoked the instant death of the Karacaşar rhino, before the body of the latter experienced severe dehydration (leading to the wide and sustainable opening of the mouth), was then dismembered within the pyroclastic flow of subaerial origin, the skull being separated from the remnant body and baked under a temperature approximating 400°C, then transported northward, rolled, and trapped in disarray into that pyroclastic flow forming the pinkish Kavak-4 ignimbrite ∼30 km North from the upper Miocene vent.
保存在火山岩中的化石脊椎动物极为罕见。在土耳其中部卡帕多西亚的 9.2±0.1 Ma 年龄的火山灰中发现了一具犀牛的完整头骨(颅骨和下颌骨)。头骨硬组织保存的异常情况(粗糙的骨表面和易碎的牙本质)让人怀疑其生前曾暴露于热源。
方法/主要发现:在这里,我们将头骨描述并鉴定为大型双角犀科 Ceratotherium neumayri,该种在东地中海晚中新世时期广为人知。然后监测和比较硬组织(骨骼和牙齿)的宏观结构特征和微观变化,以及法医和考古研究以及专注于加热效果的实验结果,以重建假设的生前条件。致密骨(管腔和板层消失)的宏观和微观结构变化,以及部分牙本质/牙骨质解体、釉质-牙本质明显分离或影响所有硬组织(釉质、牙骨质和牙本质)的微观裂缝表明,其持续暴露于约 400-450°C 的温度下。与其他在火山岩中保存的化石脊椎动物的情况相比,这无疑与意大利维苏威火山的公元 79 年普林尼式喷发有一些相似之处。
结论/意义:源自恰达克火山口的 9.2±0.1 Ma 年龄的火山碎屑密度流可能导致了卡拉卡萨尔犀牛的即时死亡,然后后者的身体经历了严重的脱水(导致嘴巴广泛而持久地张开),然后在源自大气的火山碎屑流中被肢解,头骨与残余身体分离,并在接近 400°C 的温度下烘烤,然后向北运输、滚动并混乱地困在形成粉红色卡瓦克-4 火山灰的火山碎屑流中,距离上新世喷口约 30 公里。