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Post by brillbilly on Jul 2, 2012 2:13:20 GMT 10
Amazing discovery - a fossilised tree trunk in a burial chamber on Angelesy
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Post by boxfree on Jul 2, 2012 3:50:15 GMT 10
I think this would be easy to explain. Dinosaur markings possibly. Bull elk will hone their tines and even bust branches of trees to make competitors aware of their presence. Every year in spring they remove the hairy skin off their new antlers (buck rub)
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Post by brillbilly on Jul 2, 2012 6:45:05 GMT 10
I think this would be easy to explain. Dinosaur markings possibly. Bull elk will hone their tines and even bust branches of trees to make competitors aware of their presence. Every year in spring they remove the hairy skin off their new antlers (buck rub) I can see that we only need to look at the The Creswellian culture or the Maglemosian culture The Creswellian is a British Upper Palaeolithic culture named after the type site of Creswell Crags in Derbyshire by Dorothy Garrod in 1926. The Creswellian dates from c. 13.000 to 11,500 BP and was replaced by the Mesolithic Maglemosian culture Food species eaten by Creswellian hunters focused on the wild horse (Equus ferus) or the red deer (Cervus elaphus), probably depending on the season, although the arctic hare, reindeer, mammoth, Saiga antelope, wild cow, brown bear, lynx, arctic fox and wolf were also exploited. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creswellian
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