Record number JS151
   
    Number of items 1
   
    Related record MRW : BE190130-1
   
    Related record MRW : BE190130-2
   
    Identification  
        Simple name fossil
        Full name mammoth right mandible and molar
        Other name steppe mammoth
        Named collection Beeston Mammoth
        Classified name Mammalia & Proboscidea & Elephantidae & Mammuthus trogontherii
            System Linnaean
            Status  
            Currency  
            Authority3 Lister, Adrian (NHM, London)
            Authority3 Saarinen, Juha (University of Helsinki)
        Authority  
        Brief description Fossil, mammoth right mandible and molar (steppe mammoth, Mammuthus trogontherii); in situ find from the Lower Pleistocene deposits, Cromer Forest-bed Formation (Beeston Member, bed q) of Beeston Regis beach, in a loose block found fresh ly fallen at the base of the cliff; 52 m east of Beeston Regis datum, 16 m north of the revetment; encased in a ferricreted, orange, non-shelly, matrix-supported, sandy gravel with grey clay adhering to one side, Beeston Regis, Norfolk, UK
   
    Description  
        Form mandible (right mandible with m3 in situ)
   
    Field collection  
        Place & & Beeston Regis & Norfolk & UK
            Site name Beeston Regis beach
                Note4 in a loose block found freshly fallen at the base of the cliff; 52 m east of Beeston Regis datum, 16 m north of the revetment; encased in a ferricreted, orange, non-shelly, matrix-supported, sandy gravel with grey clay adhering to one si de
            Locality number BE52E
            Coordinates geocoordinates : 52°56'37.05"N, 1°13'38.37"E
            Relative position  
            Stratigraphy rock : Cromer Forest-bed Formation & Beeston Member & bed q
                Note4 stoney sand with iron-bound patches at the level of the mammoth remains
            Stratigraphy stage : Beestonian
            Stratigraphy age : Pleistocene & Lower Pleistocene
            Stratigraphy  
                Note4  
            Note3  
        Method in situ find
        Person collector : Stewart, Jonathan
        Date 12.12.2017
        Collection number  
   
    Permanent location  
   
    Recorder MRW : 6.1.2018
   
    Description  
        Completeness incomplete (only left half of the mandible; the ascending ramus is missing and the molar is damaged, fortuitously exposing the interior structure of the tooth)
        Condition  
        Part:dimen:reading : :
        Part:aspect:desc  
   
    Conservation  
        Method  
        Person conservator : JS
        Date 2017
        Note  
        Reference number  
   
    Photography  
        Method  
        Person photographer : MRW
        Date 2017
        Photograph number  
        Photograph number  
   
 
180106_1.jpg
            Type3 digitised image
   
 
180106_2.jpg
            Type3 digitised image
   
    Process  
        Type  
        Method  
        Person :
        Date  
        Note  
        Reference number  
   
    Research  
        Date 3.6.2019
        Person palaeontologist : Saarinen, Juha
        Note Length of molar 300 mm; width 136.9 mm; height (heavily worn [144.6]; lamellar frequency 7.5; enamel thickness 1; plicae amplitude 2.2 mm; plicae frequency 6; N lamellae 18; mesowear angles - 6th lamella 118.8, 7th lamella 123.5, mean me sowear 121.15
        Result measurements
   
    Research  
        Date 2018
        Person palaeontologist : Dickinson, Marc (University of York) & Penkman, Kirsty and Lister, Adrian
        Note Sampled for enamel AAR analysis
        Result not processed due to lack of laboratory time
   
    Documentation group  
        Link jsbeeston.html
   
    Documentation group  
        Link  
        Class  
        Reference Dickinson, M., Penkman, K. and Lister, M. : 2018 October : A new method for enamel amino acid raceization dating: a closed system approach :
        Reference number  
   
    Notes Juha Saarinen of University of Helsinki visited JS Saturday 1.6.2019 and took measurements of all the recent mammoth remains from Beeston in Jon's collection (JS151, JS224, JS225 and JS193). These are all thought to be from the same anim al whose skeletal remains are gradually eroding from the cliff. Measurements are included in the Modes record for each specimen but the conclusions he draws state that: "The measurements of the mammoth molars definitely indicate 'Mammuthis trogontherii', but possibly quite an early member of that series (because the teeth do not seem very high crowned, but this could simply be because they are so heavily worn). The mesowear angle measurements indicate quite heavily grass-dominated diet for the Beeston mammoth teeth (more than 70 percent grass). I also calculated the body mass estimate based on measurements of the femur, and that is ca. 8800 kg (which is much more than in modern elephants, and quite typical for early Middle Pleistocene Mammuthus trogontherii)."
   
    Notes A whole mandible (both sides) of the mammoth M. trogontherii was recovered by A.J. Stuart prior to 1980 in situ from the base of a gravel mapped by R.G. West as bed o resting upside down on a silt, bed k. Thought to be Beestonian and stratigraphically beneath this specimen. It is in the collection of the Zoological Museum, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge.
   
    Admin category importance : 1
        Note Part of skeleton group of the large 'Beeston Mammoth' Mammuthus trogontherii emerging from the cliff. The width of the tooth is much higher than recorded in other M. trogontherii. It has 17 plates preserved (incomplete)