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Bearded Vulture Nests in Spain Yield 700 Years of Artifacts, Study Finds

Archaeological digs at 12 cliff sites reveal human artifacts alongside bones, offering clues for future conservation.

Overview

  • A peer-reviewed Ecology paper details layer-by-layer analyses of 12 long-abandoned bearded vulture nests in southern Spain.
  • Radiocarbon dating places human-made items between roughly 150 and 675 years old, including a complete esparto-grass sandal, decorated sheep leather, a crossbow bolt and slingshot parts.
  • Researchers cataloged 2,483 remains overall, counting 226 human-made objects alongside 2,117 bones, 86 hooves, 72 leather fragments, 11 hair remains and 43 eggshell pieces.
  • Teams located more than 50 well-preserved nests and excavated 12 between 2008 and 2014 using archaeological stratigraphy after consulting historic records and local residents.
  • The authors describe the cliff-cave deposits as natural museums preserved by dry microclimates and say the materials could support studies of past diets, contaminants and planning for habitat restoration or species reintroduction.