Thursday 7 May 2020

Giant Sloth Death Pit Reveals Death By Feces Ingestion

6 MAY, 2020 - ASHLEY COWIE
https://www.ancient-origins.net/news-general/giant-sloth-death-pit-0013675


Students make protective plaster wrappings for asphalt-preserved giant sloth bones at the Tanque Loma tar pit locality in southwestern Ecuador. ( Martin Tomasz / La Brea Tar Pits )

The fossilized remains of 22 Ice Age, elephant sized sloths have been found preserved in 20,000-year-old asphalt in Ecuador. The discovery of this giant sloth death pit is revealing a virtual Bible of new evolutionary facts.

The ancient remains were found in Tanque Loma paleontological site, also known as Arroyo Seco, on the northern side of the Santa Elena Peninsula (SEP) in southwest Ecuador. 20,000 years ago this region was a dense marshland and the team of researchers found that the 22 giant sloths had died after “consuming their own feces”, before being preserved in the death pit by encroaching asphalt seeping up from the ground.

An Extended Family of Elephant-Sized Ancient Creatures

This famous dig site was first excavated in 2003 and because it is located on the side of a hill holding various oil tanks and containers, it has been named “'Tanque Loma,” or “Tank Hill.” The new study was led by University of California Los Angeles palaeontologist Emily Lindsey, who is also an assistant curator and excavation site director at the famous La Brea Tar Pits . The full findings of her study have been published in the journal Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology .

The team analyzed the remains of the 22 Ice Age sloths , which they said included: 15 adults, five juveniles, and two newborns or fetuses. But don’t for a second think these creatures were anything like the modern day sloth because not only could Eremotherium laurillardi walk fast on two legs, but an adult male was about the size of an elephant.

Fossils found in the giant sloth death pit. ( La Brea Tar Pits )



The Giant Sloth Death Pit – A Self-Constructed Armageddon Thru Contamination

The cause of death would appear to the casual observer to have been that the giant sloths had become hopelessly trapped after falling into a tar pit , but Dr. Lindsey told Gizmodo the team of researchers believe they died from “drinking water contaminated by their own faeces.” Having suffered toxic poisoning, the 22 animals were subsequently coated in seeping asphalt. The archaeologists also discovered the fossilized remains of a “horse, a deer, an armadillo-like pampathere, and an elephant-like gomphothere.”

No significant aquatic fossils were found at the ancient marshland but the team discovered “an abundance of tiny, broken-up plant remains,” which they noted were smaller than the distance between the ridges of the ancient sloths' teeth; which means the plants probably came from the animals' feces, which might have contaminated the drinking water and subsequently killed them.


Sipping From the Poisoned Puddle of Doom

The grotesque nature of these 22 creatures’ deaths aside, this discovery is being called “science's gain,” as the giant sloth death pit assemblage has shined light on the animal's social nature, said palaeontologist José Luis Román-Carrión of the Escuela Politécnica Nacional university , to Gizmodo, and now scientists know ancient Eremotherium “lived in social groups, and had parental behaviour.”

While it might be the first time you have ever considered a group of giant life forms eating and dying in their own waste, it does occur from time to time in the worlds of paleontology and archaeology. An article in the The Daily Mail for example, tells of a team of scientists in the seventies discovering the remains of “140 hippos” that gathered around a watering hole in Tanzania's Selous Game Reserve. In this disaster, when the waterhole shrunk the excrement left by the mammals mounted in the little water that was left, and in what must have been a very grim moment in evolution, their self-created feces-riddled puddle eventually poisoned all of them.



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