Hermann's Cave, Germany

ebook A Late Pleistocene Cave Bear Den · Famous Planet Earth Caves

By Cajus G. Diedrich

cover image of Hermann's Cave, Germany

Sign up to save your library

With an OverDrive account, you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. Find out more about OverDrive accounts.

   Not today

Find this title in Libby, the library reading app by OverDrive.

Download Libby on the App Store Download Libby on Google Play

Search for a digital library with this title

Title found at these libraries:

Library Name Distance
Loading...

Famous Planet Earth Caves presents information about geologically important caves or rock shelters in different kinds of rock formations all over the world. Each volume of this series is a focused monograph on a single cave. The series covers many disciplines that can be applied to study a cave: geology (cave genesis, sedimentology, speleothems), hydrogeology (speleothems for climate reconstructions, aquifer reconstructions), paleontology (cave bear or carnivore dens), archeology (Palaeolithic to Medieval camp or burial sites) and modern biology. Each volume is beautifully illustrated and written in a simple manner that will be of interest to general readers, speleologists and natural scientists, alike. This volume gives details of Hermann's Cave in RĂ¼beland near Wernigerode, Germany. It is one of the largest show caves in Germany and Europe. The cave gives us information about the region in the Ice Age dating back between 350.000 – 14.000 years (which implies its significance in the Middle and Late Pleistocene epochs). The cave is within old limestone rocks and valley cut landscape nearby the beautiful 1,114 meters high elevated granite Brocken Peak of the Harz Mountains. The volume presents information about the Late Pleistocene fauna discovered within the cave and other archaeological Late Palaeolithic Aurignacien hunter-gatherer findings. Specifically, the volume gives details about the small and large cave bear species within the cave, their ecological relationship to the region (including interactions with steppe lions and Cromagnon humans), and their survival in Ice Age taiga forest mountain areas of central Europe. The cave's unique and large amount of lion skeleton remains allow it to present a great bone atlas for those extinct felids. This volume continues the premise of the book series on bringing information about fossils and archaeological records of well-known caves to light and will give readers an interesting peek into the Hermann's Cave by bringing some of its Ice Age stories to life.

Hermann's Cave, Germany