Late Pleistocene survival of Homotherium
In Europe, they previously were known only from the early and middle Pleistocene and their fossils are always extremely rare. The previous youngest record was from Steinheim a/d Murr, Germany, where an upper canineof Homotherium was found in a stratum dated to ca. 0.3 Ma
On March 16, 2000, the fishing vessel UK33 trawled a partial mandible of Homotherium latidens from a locality southeast of the Brown Bank in the North Sea. This specific area is only known to yield late Pleistocene and early Holocene mammalian fossils. Therefore, the discovery struck our attention as being of possible interest because no late Pleistocene Machairodontines have been reported from Europe.
The mandible is dated by 14C to be late Pleistocene, ca. 28,000 yrBP.
JOURNAL OF VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY, VOL. 23, NO. 1, 2003