Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gxg78 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-30T17:21:49.821Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Morphology of Pleistocene elephant tracks on South Africa's Cape south coast and probable elephant trunk-drag impressions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 June 2021

Charles W. Helm*
Affiliation:
African Centre for Coastal Palaeoscience, P.O. Box 77000, Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth6031, South Africa
Martin G. Lockley
Affiliation:
African Centre for Coastal Palaeoscience, P.O. Box 77000, Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth6031, South Africa Dinosaur Trackers Research Group, Campus Box 172, University of Colorado at Denver, P.O. Box 173364, Denver80217-3364, USA
Lizette Moolman
Affiliation:
Scientific Services, South African National Parks, P.O. Box 3542, Knysna6570, South Africa
Hayley C. Cawthra
Affiliation:
African Centre for Coastal Palaeoscience, P.O. Box 77000, Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth6031, South Africa Geophysics and Remote Sensing Unit, Council for Geoscience, Western Cape Regional Office, P.O. Box 572, Bellville7535, South Africa
Jan C. De Vynck
Affiliation:
African Centre for Coastal Palaeoscience, P.O. Box 77000, Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth6031, South Africa
Mark G. Dixon
Affiliation:
African Centre for Coastal Palaeoscience, P.O. Box 77000, Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth6031, South Africa
Willo Stear
Affiliation:
African Centre for Coastal Palaeoscience, P.O. Box 77000, Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth6031, South Africa
Guy H.H. Thesen
Affiliation:
African Centre for Coastal Palaeoscience, P.O. Box 77000, Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth6031, South Africa
*
*Corresponding author at: P.O. Box 1690, Tumbler Ridge, British ColumbiaV0C 2W0, Canada. Email address: helm.c.w@gmail.com (C. Helm).
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Aeolianites and cemented foreshore deposits on South Africa's Cape south coast have the capacity to record and preserve events that transpired on them when they were composed of unconsolidated sand. Thirty-five Pleistocene elephant tracksites have been identified along this coastline. This abundance of sites along what was the margin of the vast Palaeo-Agulhas Plain allows for an appreciation of the forms that elephant tracks and traces can take in the context of the global proboscidean track record. They point to a significant regional elephant presence from Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 11 (~400 ka) through MIS 5 (~130–80 ka) to MIS 3 (~35 ka) and also indicate repeated use of certain dune areas. They buttress Holocene and historical evidence that elephants made use of open areas in the region, and that the remaining “Knysna elephants” retreated into dense afrotemperate forest for protection in recent centuries. Analogies can be drawn between Pleistocene elephant tracks and Mesozoic dinosaur tracks, and some of the Cape south coast elephant tracks are among the largest Cenozoic (and hence, Quaternary) tracks ever to be described. A newly identified tracksite in this area may provide the first reported evidence of elephant trunk-drag impressions.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © University of Washington. Published by Cambridge University Press, 2021

INTRODUCTION

The Cape south coast of South Africa contains an array of Pleistocene tracks and trace fossils in aeolianites (cemented dunes) and cemented foreshore deposits (e.g., Helm et al., Reference Helm, Cawthra, Cowling, De Vynck, Lockley, Marean, Thesen and Venter2020a). The capacity of these dune and beach surfaces to record events that transpired on them has been demonstrated, including the passage of humans (Helm et al., Reference Helm, McCrea, Cawthra, Cowling, Lockley, Marean, Thesen, Pigeon and Hattingh2018a), other mammals (Helm et al., Reference Helm, Cawthra, Cowling, De Vynck, Marean, McCrea and Rust2018b; Lockley et al., Reference Lockley, Helm, Cawthra, De Vynck and Perrin2021), birds (Helm et al., Reference Helm, Anderson, Buckley, Cawthra and De Vynck2017, Reference Helm, Lockley, Cawthra, De Vynck, Helm and Thesen2020b), reptiles (Lockley et al., Reference Lockley, Cawthra, De Vynck, Helm, McCrea and Nel2019; Helm et al., Reference Helm, Cawthra, Combrink, Helm, Rust, Stear and Van Den Heever2020c), and invertebrates (Helm et al., Reference Helm, Cawthra, Cowling, De Vynck, Lockley, Marean, Thesen and Venter2020a). Since 2007, more than 300 such coastal tracksites have been identified within a 350-km stretch of coastline that extends from the town of Arniston in the west to the Robberg Peninsula in the east (Helm et al., Reference Helm, Cawthra, Cowling, De Vynck, Lockley, Marean, Thesen and Venter2020a) (Fig. 1). Recent exploration of the coastline farther east has led to the identification of additional sites at Woody Cape in Algoa Bay (Lockley et al., Reference Lockley, Helm, Cawthra, De Vynck and Perrin2021).

Figure 1. Map of the Cape south coast of South Africa, indicating the main study area and the study site.

The profusion of elephant tracksites in these deposits stands in contrast to a paucity of skeletal material. To date, no Pleistocene elephant bones have been detected in these aeolianites and cemented foreshore deposits. However, an elephant tusk dated to 130 ka was found in a coastal aeolianite at Durban, ~1000 km northeast of our study area. We are also aware of at least five occurrences of elephant skeletal material occurring in Holocene dunes in our study area (De Mond, Still Bay, Cape Vacca, Nautilus Bay, Robberg Beach).

The African bush elephant (Loxodonta africana) is the largest extant land mammal in the world, and adults are more than twice as heavy as any other land mammal (Prothero, Reference Prothero1995). Adult bulls weigh up to 6000 kg (Langman et al., Reference Langman, Roberts, Black, Maloiy, Heglund, Weber, Kram and Taylor1995), and track lengths of as much as 58 cm (Liebenberg, Reference Liebenberg2000) and 57 cm (Van den Heever et al., Reference Van den Heever, Mhlongo and Benadie2017) have been reported. Roberts et al. (Reference Roberts, Bateman, Murray-Wallace, Carr and Holmes2008) provide the first description of fossil elephant tracks in southern Africa, from a Pleistocene site on the Cape south coast. Thirty-five Pleistocene elephant tracksites have subsequently been identified along this coastline (e.g., Helm et al., Reference Helm, McCrea, Cawthra, Thesen and Mwankunda2018c, Reference Helm, Cawthra, Hattingh, Hattingh, McCrea and Thesen2019a, Reference Helm, Cawthra, De Vynck, Lockley, McCrea and Venter2019b, Reference Helm, Cawthra, Cowling, De Vynck, Lockley, Marean, Thesen and Venter2020a). These sites would have been situated at the margin of the vast Palaeo-Agulhas Plain, which was alternately exposed and inundated during Pleistocene sea-level oscillations (Cawthra et al., Reference Cawthra, Jacobs, Compton, Fisher, Karkanas and Marean2018, Reference Cawthra, Cowling, Andò and Marean2020). The southernmost documented fossil elephant track is from Arniston, which lies close to the latitude of Cape Agulhas, the southernmost point of mainland Africa. Additional elephant tracks could be identified offshore through sub-marine studies of submerged aeolianite and cemented foreshore deposits (Cawthra et al., Reference Cawthra, Compton, Fisher, MacHutchon, Marean, Harff, Bailey and Lüth2015), but bio-armouring on reefs is expected to render this a challenge.

Whereas southern African tracking guidebooks (Liebenberg, Reference Liebenberg2000; Van den Heever et al., Reference Van den Heever, Mhlongo and Benadie2017; Walker, Reference Walker2018; Stuart and Stuart, Reference Stuart and Stuart2019) depict elephant tracks and trackways as a series of depressions in the substrate, the fossil track record is more complex and includes tracks preserved as natural casts in hyporelief and tracks preserved in cross section. Analogies can be drawn between Pleistocene elephant tracks and Mesozoic dinosaur tracks in terms of, for example, their ability to deform underlying sediment layers. Furthermore, elephant tracks may be eroded into recognisable forms and shapes.

The abundance of Pleistocene elephant tracksites on the Cape south coast allows for an appreciation of the forms such tracks can take and the unusual associated features that might not have been previously documented. Therefore, the purpose of this article is to (1) consider the range of elephant track morphologies recorded thus far on the Cape south coast in the context of the global proboscidean track record; (2) consider a newly identified site in the area that may provide the first palaeoichnological evidence of elephant trunk-drag impressions; and (3) provide an interpretation of this evidence against known behaviour of the extant African elephant.

ELEPHANTS AND THEIR TRACKWAYS

The proboscidean lineage can be traced to the Paleocene (Shoshani, Reference Shoshani1998), and proboscidean tracks have a wide geographical distribution. McDonald et al. (Reference McDonald, White, Lockley and Mostoe2007) provide 52 references for Proboscidea traces in a bibliography of Cenozoic vertebrate tracksites. The Cape coastal sites of South Africa add new site reports and provide the only Pleistocene records in southern Africa other than a single occurrence near Durban, more than 800 km to the northeast (Cawthra, Reference Cawthra2012). The only other southern African record that we are aware of is from Namibia, where Bennett et al. (Reference Bennett, Liutkus, Thackeray, Morse, McClymont and Stratford2010) describe Holocene elephant tracks in the Kuiseb Delta. Elsewhere in Africa, Pliocene elephant tracks have been noted in Laetoli, Tanzania (Musiba et al., Reference Musiba, Mabula, Selvaggio and Magori2008), and Pleistocene elephant tracks were found in Ileret, Kenya (Roach et al., Reference Roach, Hatala, Ostrofsky, Villmoare, Reeves, Du, Braun, Harris, Behrensmeyer and Richmond2016).

In North America, Lea (Reference Lea1996) documents proboscidean tracks in Pleistocene aeolianites in Alaska. Mammoth tracks in New Mexico (Lucas et al., Reference Lucas, Allen, Morgan, Myers, Love and Bustos2007) and late Pleistocene mammoth tracks and trample grounds in Alberta, Canada (McNeil et al., Reference McNeil, Hills, Tolman and Kooyman2007), have also been recorded. In Asia, Matsukawa and Shibata (Reference Matsukawa and Shibata2015) describe a variety of Plio-Pleistocene proboscidean tracks and trackways in fluvio-lacustrine environments in Japan. In Europe, Milàn et al. (Reference Milàn, Bromley, Titschack, Theodorou, Bromley, Buatois, Mángano, Genise and Melchor2007) describe upper Pleistocene/lower Holocene dwarf proboscidean tracks in aeolianites on the island of Rhodes, Greece; Neto De Carvalho (Reference Neto De Carvalho2009) describes mid-Pleistocene elephant tracks in aeolianites in Portugal; Milàn et al. (Reference Milàn, Theodorou, Loope, Panayides, Clemmesnsen and Gkioni2015) describe upper Pleistocene/lower Holocene dwarf elephant tracks in aeolianites on Cyprus; Pillola and Zoboli (Reference Pillola and Zoboli2017) report on Pleistocene dwarf mammoth tracks in aeolianites on the island of Sardinia; and Muñiz et al. (Reference Muñiz, Cáceres, Rodríguez Vidal, Neto de Carvalho, Belo, Finlayson, Finlayson and et al2019) describe late Pleistocene proboscidean tracks in weakly cemented coastal dune sediments in Gibraltar. Most of these tracks are preserved in aeolianites, and together with other examples from the global ichnology record, they provide evidence of widespread proboscidean travel over dune and interdune surfaces.

Three representatives of the Proboscidea order and the Elephantidae family are extant: the African bush elephant (L. africana), the smaller African forest elephant (L. cyclotis), and the Asian elephant (Elephas maximus). There is no body fossil evidence to suggest that earlier elephant species, such as L. atlantica, survived later than 400 ka in southern Africa (Klein et al., Reference Klein, Avery, Cruz-Uribe and Steele2007; Carruthers et al., Reference Carruthers, Boshoff, Slotow, Biggs, Avery, Matthews, Scholes and Mennell2008).The elephant tracks described herein occur in deposits ranging in age from Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 11 (~400 ka) through MIS 5 (~130–80 ka) to MIS 3 (~35 ka). For the MIS 5 and MIS 3 tracksites, L. africana is the most plausible source. However, it is not impossible that the MIS 11 tracksites were made by L. atlantica; it was reputedly larger than L. africana, so its tracks could be inferred to be somewhat larger (Klein et al., Reference Klein, Avery, Cruz-Uribe and Steele2007; Carruthers et al., Reference Carruthers, Boshoff, Slotow, Biggs, Avery, Matthews, Scholes and Mennell2008).

ELEPHANT TRACK MORPHOLOGY

L. africana tracks exhibit large, round forefoot (manus) impressions and narrower, oval hindfoot (pes) impressions, usually without evidence of digit impressions (Liebenberg, Reference Liebenberg2000; Van den Heever et al., Reference Van den Heever, Mhlongo and Benadie2017; Stuart and Stuart, Reference Stuart and Stuart2019). Adult tracks cannot be confused with those of any other Pleistocene trackmaker in southern Africa. However, juvenile tracks could be confused with poorly preserved tracks of other large members of the southern African Pleistocene megafauna, such as the hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius) and the rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis or Ceratotherium simum). Hippopotamus tracks can be as much as 28 cm in length and typically show four digit impressions (Van den Heever et al., Reference Van den Heever, Mhlongo and Benadie2017; Stuart and Stuart, Reference Stuart and Stuart2019). Rhinoceros tracks can be as much as 30 cm in length and typically show three digit impressions (Van den Heever et al., Reference Van den Heever, Mhlongo and Benadie2017; Stuart and Stuart, Reference Stuart and Stuart2019). However, when made in noncohesive substrates, or when the quality of preservation is poor, digit impressions may not be reliably registered or preserved. In such cases, juvenile elephant tracks could be confused with those of these species.

Extinct members of the southern African Pleistocene megafauna, such as the long-horned (or giant) buffalo (Syncerus antiquus) or the giant Cape horse (Equus capensis), made tracks that were significantly smaller than elephant tracks and should not be confused with them, except perhaps in the case of poorly preserved juvenile elephant tracks. Abiotic causes of soft sediment deformation structures (Molina et al., Reference Molina, Alfaro, Moretti and Soria2002) may cause features with similar appearances in cross section, but we have not yet encountered such features in Pleistocene deposits on the Cape south coast. In summary, identification of fossil elephant tracks is usually relatively straightforward. In all the above citations, we have not found reference to putative trunk-drag impressions of the kind suggested below.

Belvedere and Farlow (Reference Belvedere, Farlow, Falkingham, Marty and Richter2016) propose a four-point scale (0-1-2-3) for quantifying the preservation quality of vertebrate tracks. In general, tracks in aeolianites do not exhibit outstanding preservation (Haubold et al., Reference Haubold, Lockley, Hunt and Lucas1995; Lucas and Heckert, Reference Lucas and Heckert1995). Tracks in dune facies (and coarse beach sand) usually do not rise above level 2 on this scale. In the case of elephant tracks, this means that subtle features like digit impressions are not apparent. However, track size and shape can usually still be determined.

As noted above, Roberts et al. (Reference Roberts, Bateman, Murray-Wallace, Carr and Holmes2008) describe the first fossil elephant trackways and tracks from southern Africa from a site on the Cape south coast. Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating yielded a result of 140 ± 8.3 ka for the oldest dated layer (below the main elephant track horizon) and 91 ± 4.6 ka for the youngest dated layer. The main surface had dimensions of 5 × 3.5 m, with three purported juvenile elephant trackways on a well-preserved, ripple-marked palaeosurface (Fig. 2). Over time, the block split in two, exposing numerous artiodactyl tracks, before slumping into the sea by 2016 (Helm et al., Reference Helm, Cawthra, De Vynck, Lockley, McCrea and Venter2019b).

Figure 2. The main palaeosurface described by Roberts et al. (Reference Roberts, Bateman, Murray-Wallace, Carr and Holmes2008), containing elephant and other tracks.

The morphologies of elephant tracks and trackways in epirelief as impressions (natural moulds) on palaeosurfaces are of the kind described in southern African tracking books (Liebenberg, Reference Liebenberg2000; Van den Heever et al., Reference Van den Heever, Mhlongo and Benadie2017; Walker, Reference Walker2018; Stuart and Stuart, Reference Stuart and Stuart2019). They often take the form of manus and pes pairs (Fig. 3A) and display considerable displacement rims and sometimes contain an infill layer (Fig. 3B). The displacement rims are usually more prominent on the downslope sides of the impression and thus aid in track interpretation. Some of these natural mould tracks have even been documented underwater (Fig. 3C). Natural cast tracks, evident in hyporelief on the ceilings of caves and overhangs, exhibit similar morphological features, which is not unexpected.

Figure 3. (A) Manus and pes pairs of fossil elephant tracks, Garden Route National Park; scale bar = 30 cm between outer black circles. (B) An elephant trackway east of Still Bay, exhibiting displacement rims and infill. (C) One of the authors measuring an underwater elephant track on the Robberg Peninsula. (D) Convolution of the bedding plane layers due to elephant tracks, seen in cross section in the Goukamma Nature Reserve; scale bar = 15 cm.

In contrast, elephant tracks in cross section display some surprising features that invite comparisons with dinosaur tracks. In both cases, the tracks were the largest of their time made by the heaviest creatures and therefore had the greatest impact on underlying layers of sediment, possibly resulting in turbation of trampled areas. One example, in the Goukamma Nature Reserve, exhibits substantial convolution of the bedding plane layers in cross section (Helm et al., Reference Helm, McCrea, Cawthra, Thesen and Mwankunda2018c, Fig. 3D). The origin of these features is readily determined by following the layers to where the bedding plane surfaces are exposed, where they exhibit typical elephant tracks. Laury (Reference Laury1980) describes trampling, referred to as “megabioturbation,” by Pleistocene mammoths. Laporte and Behrensmeyer (Reference Laporte and Behrensmeyer1980) describe various Quaternary examples of substrate reworking, or trampling, in East Africa. Examples of dinosaur tracks deforming underlying sediments, known as “dinoturbation,” are presented in Figure 4.

Figure 4. (A) Deformation of underlying layers beneath a Cretaceous dinosaur track in Western Australia; scale bar = 10 cm. (B) Substantial deformation of underlying layers beneath a Cretaceous dinosaur track in China; scale bar = 15 cm. (C) Dinoturbation in Cretaceous sediments near Broome, Western Australia.

As is the case with dinosaur tracks, elephant tracks deform these underlying layers in a predictable pattern, creating undertracks or “transmitted tracks.” In cross section, each successive lower layer is deformed to a slightly lesser degree, but the horizontal dimensions of each layer are slightly greater than those in the layer immediately above (Fig. 5A). In this respect, Figure 5A can be compared with Figure 4A, which shows similar features in a dinosaur track. As a result, a bedding plane surface representing one of these underlying surfaces may exhibit enormous depressions, which in fact are transmitted tracks. Such was the case on the Robberg Peninsula, where Helm et al. (Reference Helm, Cawthra, Hattingh, Hattingh, McCrea and Thesen2019a) recorded track lengths of 70 cm, 65 cm, and 62 cm (Fig. 5B). Even with the understanding that these were transmitted tracks, and therefore probably somewhat larger than the original tracks, it can be claimed that they are among the largest Cenozoic tracks ever to be described and hence among the largest Quaternary tracks recorded. Confirmation that these were elephant transmitted tracks was obtained through crawling into a tight recess and finding further tracks on this surface that contained infill layers in the form of typical elephant tracks. Stewart et al. (Reference Stewart, Clark-Wilson, Breeze, Janulis, Candy, Armitage and Ryves2020) describe large Pleistocene proboscidean tracks (diameters of as much as 63 cm) in the Arabian Peninsula. Elephant tracks in cross section can also assist in determining the “way-up” of loose, ex situ blocks and slabs. At the Robberg Peninsula site, the orientation of a gigantic block that had tumbled down from overlying cliffs could be determined at a distance by noting the direction in which elephant tracks had been registered (Fig. 5C).

Figure 5. (A) An elephant track seen in section, illustrating deformation of underlying layers. (B) Elephant transmitted tracks (indicated by white arrows) recorded on the Robberg Peninsula; scale bars = 30 cm between outer black circles. (C) The orientation of this large block (adult human figure provides scale) can be determined at a distance by noting the orientation in cross section of elephant tracks (indicated by white arrows). (D) Elephant tracks can be identified on this surface in De Hoop Nature Reserve despite erosion and poor preservation.

Tracks registered by smaller, lighter trackmakers may not be discernible on poorly preserved surfaces. However, because of their size and depth, elephant tracks may be identifiable on such surfaces (Fig. 5D) and may therefore be recorded with disproportionate frequency.

Depending on the nature of the substrate, elephant tracks may be extraordinarily deep. As with dinosaur tracks, if tracks were registered in moist muddy substrates, leading to deep depressions, and a layer of sand provided the infill layer, the latter is often preserved while the muddy layer is often eroded. This leads to the phenomenon where the layer of infill is obvious in cross section and may reach depths of 30 cm (Fig. 6A and B). Again, comparison with the dinosaur tracks shown in Figure 4 is of value. Where such infill layers in tracks are resistant to erosion, remarkable forms may result (Fig. 7A–C).

Figure 6. (A) and (B) Deep infill layers seen in cross section at sites east of Still Bay. In both cases, the track dimensions are not large enough to exclude rhinoceros or hippopotamus as trackmakers, but numerous elephant tracks are evident where these surfaces are exposed, increasing the probability that the trackmaker was a juvenile elephant. Scale bar in (B) = 10 cm.

Figure 7. (A), (B), (C) Eroded elephant tracks and infill layers may take on remarkable forms (indicated by white arrows); scale bars in (A) and (C) = 10 cm. (A) and (C) are in the Goukamma Nature Reserve, and (B) is east of Still Bay. (D) Potholes in linear patterns on the Cape south coast, for which elephant tracks were likely precursors.

Deformations on the Cape south coast consistent with elephant tracks in cross section have been noted in seven discrete layers over a stratigraphic sectional height of 10 m of aeolianites at one site (Helm et al., Reference Helm, McCrea, Cawthra, Thesen and Mwankunda2018c). At another site, a section measuring 26 m displayed multiple discrete layers containing such structures in aeolianites. Where bedding plane surfaces are exposed in epirelief at these sites, elephant tracks are evident. From such observations, inferences on repeated use over time of an area of dune surfaces have been made, although the time interval that such sections represent cannot accurately be determined (Helm et al., Reference Helm, McCrea, Cawthra, Thesen and Mwankunda2018c). Palaeosurfaces containing elephant tracks do not necessarily slump into the sea or erode away. It has been demonstrated that elephant tracks on Cape south coast palaeobeaches can serve as precursors to pothole formation (Helm et al., Reference Helm, Cawthra, De Vynck, Dixon and Stear2021) (Fig. 7D).

Associations of trackmakers are of potential importance. Along the Goukamma Nature Reserve coastline, elephant tracks were found close to a long trackway interpreted as having been made by a long-horned (giant) buffalo. Trackways interpreted as having been made by the extinct Cape subspecies of the African lion (Panthera leo melanochaitus) also occur close by (Helm et al., Reference Helm, McCrea, Cawthra, Thesen and Mwankunda2018c). East of Still Bay, a probable long-horned buffalo track was centrally registered within a large elephant track on a surface containing multiple elephant tracks (Helm et al., Reference Helm, Cawthra, De Vynck, Lockley, McCrea and Venter2019b) (Fig. 8). At Brenton-on-Sea, elephant tracks were found on layers adjacent to those containing hominin tracks (Helm et al., Reference Helm, McCrea, Cawthra, Cowling, Lockley, Marean, Thesen, Pigeon and Hattingh2018a).

Figure 8. East of Still Bay, a probable long-horned buffalo track is centrally registered within a large elephant track. Scale bar = 10 cm.

GEOLOGICAL CONTEXT

The origin and age of Cape south coast sediment accumulations, episodes of dune building, and the accumulation of coastal sand deposits and their association with Pleistocene sea-level fluctuations have been investigated geologically in some detail during the last decade (e.g., Carr et al., Reference Carr, Bateman, Roberts, Murray-Wallace, Jacobs and Holmes2010; Fisher at al., Reference Fisher, Bar-Matthews, Jerardino and Marean2010; Jacobs, Reference Jacobs2010; Bateman et al., Reference Bateman, Carr, Dunajko, Holmes, Roberts, McLaren and Bryant2011; Roberts et al., Reference Roberts, Cawthra and Musekiwa2013; Carr et al., Reference Carr, Bateman, Cawthra and Sealy2019). OSL studies from numerous sites along the Cape south coast have demonstrated that two significant sea-level high stands preserved deposits from the interglacial periods MIS 11 (~400 ka) (Jacobs et al., Reference Jacobs, Roberts, Lachlan, Karkanas, Marean and Roberts2011; Roberts et al., Reference Roberts, Karkanas, Jacobs, Marean and Roberts2012) and MIS 5e (~125 ka) (Carr et al., Reference Carr, Bateman, Roberts, Murray-Wallace, Jacobs and Holmes2010; Cawthra et al., Reference Cawthra, Jacobs, Compton, Fisher, Karkanas and Marean2018); evidence for deposits laid down during MIS 4 and MIS 3 have recently been reported from the continental shelf (Cawthra et al., Reference Cawthra, Jacobs, Compton, Fisher, Karkanas and Marean2018) and the Robberg Peninsula (Carr et al., Reference Carr, Bateman, Cawthra and Sealy2019). Roberts et al. (Reference Roberts, Cawthra and Musekiwa2013) note that these types of deposits can be sensitive palaeoenvironmental indicators, as recorded in their orientation, geometry, and palaeontological and archaeological content.

The ichnological discoveries above allow for palaeoenvironmental inferences to be drawn; they complement the evidence available through the body fossil record, thus filling unanticipated gaps in this record.

At a global level, aeolianite deposits are mostly found in mid-latitude regions, typically between 20° and 40° (Brooke, Reference Brooke2001); aeolianite outcrops occur intermittently along much of the South African coast. The Pleistocene aeolianites encountered on the Cape south coast form the Waenhuiskrans Formation (Malan, Reference Malan1989). The Pleistocene cemented foreshore deposits form part of the Klein Brak Formation, along with shoreface and lagoonal deposits (Malan, Reference Malan1991). The two formations form part of the Bredasdorp Group. Where they crop out, these deposits alternate with expanses of beach and unconsolidated Holocene dunes, remnant Neogene dune ridges, Palaeozoic quartzite exposures of the Cape Supergroup, granite exposures of the Cape Granite Suite, and Neoproterozoic metasedimentary successions (Newton et al., Reference Newton, Shone, Booth, Johnson, Annhauser and Thomas2006). Because Quaternary tectonic activity is considered minimal along this coastline (Fleming et al., Reference Fleming, Johnston, Zwartz, Yokoyama, Lambeck and Chappell1998), bedding planes in the Pleistocene formations lie at, or very close to, their original angles of deposition. In the case of aeolianites, this is often the angle of repose of windblown sands (Roberts et al., Reference Roberts, Karkanas, Jacobs, Marean and Roberts2012); cross bedding may be evident, while interdune areas and cemented foreshore deposits typically exhibit bedding plane layers that lie closer to the horizontal plane. Distinguishing between these types of deposits is not always simple, even with microscopy. Given the frequency of transition zones between beaches and dunes, as well as sea-level fluctuations that prompt calcium carbonate diagenesis at different levels of the stratigraphy, this is not surprising.

OSL studies from numerous sites along the Cape south coast have demonstrated that, while the great majority of Pleistocene deposits are from MIS 5 (~130–80 ka), substantially older and younger deposits also occur. For example, Roberts et al. (Reference Roberts, Karkanas, Jacobs, Marean and Roberts2012) demonstrate that both MIS 11 and MIS 5 deposits occur at Dana Bay. The MIS 11 deposits date to ~400 ka (Roberts et al., Reference Roberts, Karkanas, Jacobs, Marean and Roberts2012), and elephant tracks are apparent in these layers (Helm et al., Reference Helm, Cawthra, De Vynck, Dixon and Stear2021). In contrast, Carr et al. (Reference Carr, Bateman, Cawthra and Sealy2019) demonstrate that some deposits on the Robberg Peninsula are much younger, dating to MIS 3 and as young as 35 ka. Again, elephant tracks are evident in the MIS 3 deposits (Helm et al., Reference Helm, Cawthra, Hattingh, Hattingh, McCrea and Thesen2019a).

METHODS

The site containing possible elephant trunk-drag impressions is located in the Goukamma Nature Reserve and was visited at low tide, during a period in which it was exposed and not covered by sand. Track length, width, and depth were recorded in centimetres, along with measurements of pace length where applicable. Track numbers were assigned from 1 (most landward) through 13 (most seaward). Dimensions were recorded for the groove features described below, along with distances from the median trackway axis. A GPS reading was taken, using the World Geodetic System 84 datum. A sample was obtained for OSL dating from a suitable layer located 1.8 m lower in the stratigraphic section.

We climbed nearby cliffs, which permitted an aerial view of the site. Standard field techniques were applied in understanding tracksite context. Dip and strike measurements were taken on primary bedding planes, bed thicknesses were measured, and textures were described.

Locality data were reposited with the African Centre for Coastal Palaeoscience and Garden Route National Park to be made available to researchers upon request. Photographs were taken, including photogrammetric analysis (Matthews et al., Reference Matthews, Noble, Breithaupt, Falkingham, Marty and Richter2016). Three-dimensional models were generated with Agisoft Metashape Professional (version 1.0.4), using an Olympus Tough model TG-6 camera (4.5 mm focal length, 4000 × 3000 resolution, pixel size 1.56 × 1.56 μm). The final images were rendered using CloudCompare (version 2.10-beta).

RESULTS

The Goukamma Nature Reserve tracksite is in an area containing a high concentration of elephant tracks in multiple layers, seen in epirelief and cross section, as well as bovid tracks of various sizes, including well-preserved long-horned buffalo tracks with dew-claw impressions. The area also contains a medium-sized bovid coprolite site and a small carnivore coprolite site, both of which are associated with tracks. The strike of the bedding planes in this area varies from 293° to 330°, and dip measurements vary from 12° to 30°, indicating a succession of dune layers and a predominant wind direction at the time of deposition from the southwest.

A series of at least 13 features, consistent in size and shape with elephant tracks, was noted along the strike (293°) of one of these bedding plane surfaces, hence in a direction that traverses the side of the dune slope (Fig. 9). A dip measurement of less than 30° was recorded. Twelve of these features are depressions; track 8 is an eroded remnant of the infill layer of a track. This natural cast phenomenon provides further confirmation that the depressions apparent on the surface were registered when it was made up of unconsolidated sand.

Figure 9. A sloping aeolianite surface in the Goukamma Nature Reserve, showing elephant tracks and two elongated grooves interpreted as possible trunk-drag impressions (indicated by arrows). (A) and (B) are facing southeast, and (C) and (D) are facing northwest; scale bars = 10 cm.

The trackway extends the full length of the bedding plane surface, which is rough and cracked in places and has suffered the effects of erosion, especially at the seaward end. The quality of track preservation is therefore poor in places, and in some cases, dimensions could not reliably be determined. Digit impressions were not identified. In two cases, tracks are contiguous and were thus not amenable to reliable measurement. Nonetheless, enough detail was evident to permit interpretation. Direction of travel could not unequivocally be determined. We chose to describe the trackway and associated features facing southeast, i.e. in a landward-to-seaward direction.

Two cracks in the surface cross the trackway, the distal crack being wider than the proximal crack (Figs. 9 and 10). The proximal crack passes through track 4. Furrows are present on other portions of the surface, probably attributable to postdepositional water erosion resulting from repeated inundation of the surface during tidal action. The concentration of tracks is greater at the seaward end. Elephants often reuse tracks and trails, and the possibility that the tracks in this portion represent more than one trackway cannot be excluded.

Figure 10. Plan of an elephant trackway and purported trunk-drag impressions in the Goukamma Nature Reserve.

A total trackway length of ~5 m was measured. Data for the measurable tracks, which are consistent in shape and size with an elephant trackmaker, are presented in Table 1. Track 5, situated on a less-eroded section of the surface, is the best preserved and exhibits a substantial downslope displacement feature.

Table 1. Track dimensions of the elephant trackway in the Goukamma Nature Reserve, Cape south coast, South Africa, from north to south.

The striking feature of this trackway is a set of two wide grooves, located within it or close beside it (one on either side) and approximately parallel to it. The proximal groove, which is evident downslope (east) of the trackway, exhibits better preservation, as it occurrs in a less-eroded portion of the surface. The length, including the three smaller proximal areas described hereafter, is 270 cm; it measures135 cm without these three features. Maximum width is 20 cm. A slight displacement rim is present at its medial and lateral margins. Its lateral margin (relative to the trackway) displays a slight outward convexity; the proximal end of this lateral margin exhibits three smaller successive areas with outer convexity. These are closely associated with tracks 2 and 4 and with small displacement rims, which appear to cover these portions of the groove feature (i.e. the tracks appear to slightly distort the groove feature and to have been registered on top of it). Only vestigial track 3 could be detected beside the middle of these three areas of convexity/distortion. At is proximal end, the groove lies within or close to the median axis of the trackway, whereas distance from the groove to this axis reaches a maximum of ~60 cm at its distal end.

The distal groove feature (seaward and upslope of the trackway) is present in a more eroded portion of the surface; hence, the quality of preservation is not as good as in the case of the proximal groove. However, it could be determined that its proximal end correlates approximately with the distal end of the proximal groove. It is at least 110 cm in length, with a maximum measured width of 15 cm. It displays more of an outward convexity than the proximal groove, evident in both its medial and lateral margins. Its proximal origin appears to be close to track 5, and the maximum distance from the median axis of the trackway is ~40 cm. If the observed pattern evident in the proximal and distal groove features recurred, the resulting grooves would be positioned beyond the northern and southern limits of the track-bearing surface.

The tracksite is only exposed at low tide and is subject to intense wave action during high tides and storm surges. It is also frequently covered by sand. Over the past decade, it has only been exposed on two brief occasions, in 2015 and 2019. A plan view of the trackway is presented in Figure 10. Photogrammetry images are presented in Figure 11, showing displacement rims at the margins of the proximal groove feature, with the lateral displacement rim more prominent than the medial displacement rim (consistent with its downslope position).

Figure 11. Photogrammetry colour mesh of a purported elephant trunk-drag impression; vertical and horizontal scales are in metres. (A) 18 images were used, and the photographs were taken at an average of 56.7 cm from the surface; the reprojection error is 0.296 pix. (B) 21 images were used, and the photographs were taken at an average of 54.8 cm from the surface; the reprojection error is 0.251 pix; a portion of track 5 is also evident.

DISCUSSION

Elephant trunk-drag impressions

The available evidence, as summarized above, indicates an elephant trackway along with two sequential, deep, wide, elongate groove features that are aligned approximately with the longitudinal axis of the trackway. The evidence in the case of the proximal groove suggests that it was registered prior to the tracks being registered: if this impression was made by an elephant trunk, this would be consistent with elephant anatomy in which the trunk is positioned anteriorly to the limbs and registration of the trunk impression precedes the subsequent footfalls of the manus and pes. Furthermore, the presence of slight displacement rims just outside the medial and lateral margins of this groove suggests that it was made through a compressive rather than erosive force. If the sand was unconsolidated, as the evidence suggests, the forward motion of a trunk would produce a “bow wave” effect, which would in turn create the aforementioned displacement rims, resulting less from medially and laterally directed compressive forces and more from the buildup of bow wave sediment. The more prominent lateral displacement rim is consistent with its downslope position. The distal groove does not contain evidence of such rims, and an erosional cause cannot be excluded. Van den Heever et al. (Reference Van den Heever, Mhlongo and Benadie2017, p. 79), referring to trunk-drag impressions associated with trackways made by bull elephants, use the term “serpentine” (Fig. 12) to describe the resulting pattern, and a number of other authors (see below) use terms like “snakelike.” Indeed, this seems to be an apt term to describe the pattern made by the groove features, with their varying degrees of outward convexity. Furthermore, in considering potential elephant trunk-drag marks made while traversing a sloping dune surface, a more linear appearance would be expected for the downslope drag mark, and a more curved appearance would be expected for the upslope drag mark; this is consistent with the documented features. Photographs of elephant trunk-drag marks are available on various websites (e.g., Elephant Voices, n.d.).

Figure 12. Trunk-drag impressions of L. africana, showing their serpentine nature (reproduced with the permission of A. Van den Heever).

The trails of extant African bush elephants contain numerous features other than tracks. These include droppings, urine, flattened grass, broken branches and trees, bark stripped from trees, chewed material scuff marks, mud smeared on trees, and trunk-drag marks (Van den Heever et al., Reference Van den Heever, Mhlongo and Benadie2017). Indeed, at one Pleistocene elephant tracksite, we identified probable elephant coprolites, which are the object of further analysis. Furthermore, polished rock surfaces as much as 3 m above ground level have been attributed to rubbing action by mammoths in California (Haynes, Reference Haynes2006; KQED, 2009).

The trunk of L. africana, with more than 150,000 muscle fibres, is a structurally complex and highly flexible organ (Shoshani, Reference Shoshani1998) with fine neuromotor control (Onodera and Hicks, Reference Onodera and Hicks1999). Aside from its mechanical and physiological functions, it is used to socialise (Poole and Granli, Reference Poole, Granli, Moss, Croze and Lee2011) and can indicate various emotions, such as aggression, play, greeting, and affection (Vidya and Sukumar, Reference Vidya and Sukumar2005). Most adult males over the age of 24 years experience musth, a temporary state of heightened testosterone levels in their blood (Hall-Martin and Van der Walt, Reference Hall-Martin and Van der Walt1984) and urine (Poole et al., Reference Poole, Kasman, Ramsay and Lasley1984). During musth, elephant males can be particularly aggressive and increase their home ranges through extensive wandering (Poole, Reference Poole1987; Hall-Martin, Reference Hall-Martin1987). They also often use their trunks for ritualised reproductive displays at this time (Kahl and Armstrong, Reference Kahl and Armstrong2002).

Extant L. africana may register trunk-drag impressions under a variety of circumstances. Poole and Granli (Reference Poole, Granli, Moss, Croze and Lee2011, p. 118) note that “musth males may drag . . . the distal portion of the trunk on the ground, making a rasping sound. This behaviour leaves a snake-like mark on the ground. . . . Musth males may trunk-drag as a threat at very close range.” Likewise, Kahl and Armstrong (Reference Kahl and Armstrong2002, p. 167) note that “while standing, or more commonly while walking, a musth male may bounce or drag the distal portion of his trunk on the ground. One sometimes sees a snakelike drag-mark in the sand, where this has been done in the recent past.” Douglas-Hamilton et al. (Reference Douglas-Hamilton, Bhalla, Wittemeyer and Vollrath2006) describe a dying matriarch dragging her swollen trunk along the ground, and Van den Heever et al. (Reference Van den Heever, Mhlongo and Benadie2017, p. 79) state that tracks “are often accompanied by drag marks made by the trunk. Bull elephants, in particular, tend to drag their trunk, creating a serpentine trail.” Van den Heever (personal communication, 2020) also notes that small trunk impressions (unlike those described here) can be made by (usually) a bull elephant sniffing the ground in pursuit of a female herd or by an elephant collecting dust to throw onto its back; more commonly, tired elephants (usually bulls) drag their trunks on flat terrain, creating intermittent drag marks.

Among the above possibilities, the first two may be the most consistent with the features observed at our study site. It should also be noted that the behaviour of the African and Asian elephant are not identical. Kahl and Armstrong (Reference Kahl and Armstrong2002, p. 168) describe the latter's more elaborate “trunk bounce,” in which “the trunk is bounced forcefully on the ground and the elephant—not necessarily a musth male in the Asian species—utters a loud, booming vocalization.”

Other than trunk drag marks, are there other agents that could have caused the features that have been documented? The first possibility is that the grooves simply represent erosional features that the elephant happened to pass through or that have subsequently been formed. If three or more successive groove features were evident, the case for trunk-drag impressions would be stronger. If only one groove feature was present, the case would be weaker. The presence of two such features, as described, lies between these extremes and suggests such an origin without being conclusive. As noted above, an erosional cause cannot be excluded for the distal groove.

Could the grooves have been created by an elephant using something other than its trunk? Elephants may gouge out grooves with their tusks and may create long scuff marks with their feet, especially when injured (Van den Heever, A., personal communication, 2020). However, on an angled dune surface, such behaviour would likely have caused discernible irregularities in the trackway, and the sequence of two grooves, one on each side of the trackway, makes these possibilities less likely. L. africana also may drag sticks, branches, and other objects that they hold in their trunks. It is not implausible that the drag marks described were not made by the trunk but by an object that was held in the trunk.

Palaeoenvironment and the Palaeo-Agulhas Plain

Marean et al. (Reference Marean, Cowling and Franklin2020) note that L. africana is well represented in Pleistocene trackways but not in body fossil assemblages and so postulate that (1) the regular presence of elephants may have been a factor in maintaining and spreading grasslands on the Palaeo-Agulhas Plain; and (2) there may have been a regular movement of elephants between the Palaeo-Agulhas Plain and the interior. A migration corridor for large animals involving the Palaeo-Agulhas Plain has previously been suggested (Fisher et al., Reference Fisher, Bar-Matthews, Jerardino and Marean2010; Marean et al., Reference Marean, Cawthra, Cowling, Esler, Fisher, Milewski, Potts, Singels, De Vynck, Allsopp, Colville and Verboom2014; Cawthra et al., Reference Cawthra, Compton, Fisher, MacHutchon, Marean, Harff, Bailey and Lüth2015; Hodgkins et al., Reference Hodgkins, Marean, Venter, Richardson, Roberts, Zech and Difford2020). African elephants seasonally shift their ranges between different vegetation types, for example, by selecting open woodlands, shrublands, and grassland in the wet season and woody vegetation in the dry season (Loarie et al., Reference Loarie, Van Aarde and Pimm2009).

Regarding the first postulate, the mosaic of woodland and grassland, meandering rivers, and seasonally waterlogged floodplains of the Palaeo-Agulhas Plain (Cowling et al., Reference Cowling, Potts, Franklin, Midgley, Engelbrecht and Marean2020) would have provided extensive potential habitat for elephants. Elephants are ecosystem engineers (Wright and Jones, Reference Wright and Jones2006), and their presence may result in large-scale effects and changes in the landscape (Fritz, Reference Fritz2017). As large-bodied and generalist foragers, elephants at high densities can reduce woody vegetation in dry savannas (Guldemond and Van Aarde, Reference Guldemond and Van Aarde2008) and can transform woody habitats to open habitats such as mosaics or grasslands (Sinclair, Reference Sinclair1973). These newly transformed habitats, in turn, attract mixed feeders and grazers (Haynes, Reference Haynes2012). Specifically, elephants affect ecological processes through feeding, digging, and movement (Kerley et al., Reference Kerley, Landman, Kruger, Owen-Smith, Balfour, de Boer, Gaylard, Lindsay, Slotow, Scholes and Mennell2009).

The number of Pleistocene elephant tracksites on the Cape south coast, from at least three MIS stages and indicating repeated use of certain areas over time, signifies a substantial presence on the landscape. The speculation by Marean et al. (Reference Marean, Cowling and Franklin2020) that elephants had a role in maintaining and spreading grasslands on the Palaeo-Agulhas Plain appears to be justified.

Implications for the Knysna elephant population

L. africana is estimated to have ranged across Africa in numbers of more than 20 million prior to European colonisation; this has decreased substantially to recent estimates of less than 400,000 (Douglas-Hamilton and Burrill, Reference Douglas-Hamilton and Burrill1991; Chase et al., Reference Chase, Schlossberg, Griffin, Bouché, Djene, Elkan and Ferreira2016). Based on an estimated 3000 elephants that may have roamed the southern and western Cape in precolonial times (Kerley et al., Reference Kerley, Pressey, Cowling, Boshoff and Sims-Castley2003), ~1000 elephants may have occupied the Outeniqua-Tsitsikamma area just inland from the Cape south coast (Boshoff et al., Reference Boshoff, Kerley and Cowling2002). These numbers were decimated in the 19th century as a result of the ivory market and habitat transformation (Carruthers et al., Reference Carruthers, Boshoff, Slotow, Biggs, Avery, Matthews, Scholes and Mennell2008), and by 1900, only an estimated 30–50 elephants remained (Hall-Martin, Reference Hall-Martin1992). The survival of this small relict population near Knysna may be attributed to the fact that hunters had difficulty in finding them in the dense forest terrain (Skead, Reference Skead2011). Whereas in recent times, the Knysna elephants have been confined to the afrotemperate forests, historical records indicate that they occupied areas outside the forest and immediate surrounding fynbos before the 18th century (Boshoff et al., Reference Boshoff, Landman and Kerley2016). It has been suggested that the Knysna elephants retreated into the forest and surrounding fynbos for protection and would not have utilised only these two habitats year-round if they had access to others (Moolman et al., Reference Moolman, Ferreira, Gaylard, Zimmerman and Kerley2019a).

Today, only one Knysna elephant remains. She is an adult female in her 40s (Moolman et al., Reference Moolman, de Morney, Ferreira, Ganswindt, Poole and Kerley2019b) and inhabits an area ~18 km from the elephant tracksite containing the purported trunk-drag marks. The Knysna elephants were the most southerly group of elephants in Africa, the only free-ranging elephants in South Africa, and one of only four relict populations in South Africa (Hall-Martin, Reference Hall-Martin1992). Genetic studies (Essop et al., Reference Essop, Hall-Martin and Harley1996; Eggert et al., Reference Eggert, Patterson and Maldonado2008) provide evidence that the Knysna elephants formed part of a single South African population. The Pleistocene elephant tracksites described here, from a variety of ages, combined with the evidence from Holocene sites and historical records, indicate a substantial regional elephant presence in open areas dating to MIS 11. They support the contention that elephants retreated into the forest for safety reasons in recent centuries.

CONCLUSIONS

The abundance of Pleistocene elephant tracksites identified along South Africa's Cape south coast allows for an appreciation and review of the varied forms that elephant tracks and traces can take. Features of Pleistocene elephant tracks are in many ways analogous to those of Mesozoic dinosaur tracks. The regional Pleistocene elephant presence evident through a number of MIS stages and at certain locations suggests a role in maintaining and spreading grasslands on the Palaeo-Agulhas Plain. Furthermore, it supports the Holocene and historical evidence that elephants made use of open areas, and that the remaining elephants on the Cape south coast retreated into dense afrotemperate forest in recent centuries.

While the available evidence is not conclusive, we suggest that the elongated groove features noted in the Goukamma Nature Reserve and described here represent the first reported example in the global trace fossil record of elephant trunk-drag marks. A possible behavioural explanation for these features is that they were created by a bull elephant during musth while traversing a dune slope.

Acknowledgments

We appreciate the assistance of Jack Carrigan, Carina Helm, Linda Helm, Chris Stuart, Alex Van den Heever, Marius Van der Vyver, Jan Venter, John Ward, and the CapeNature staff. We thank Matthew Bennett and James Farlow for their helpful reviews, and Editors Derek Booth and Curtis Marean for their insights and suggestions, all of which resulted in significant improvements to the manuscript.

References

REFERENCES

Bateman, M.D., Carr, A.S., Dunajko, A.C., Holmes, P.J., Roberts, D.L., McLaren, S.J., Bryant, R.G., et al. , 2011. The evolution of coastal barrier systems: a case study of the middle-late Pleistocene Wilderness barriers, South Africa. Quaternary Science Reviews 30, 6381.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Belvedere, M., Farlow, J.O., 2016. A numerical scale for quantifying the quality of preservation of vertebrate tracks. In: Falkingham, P.L., Marty, D., Richter, A. (Eds.), Dinosaur Tracks: The Next Steps. Indiana University Press, Bloomington, pp. 9299.Google Scholar
Bennett, M.R., Liutkus, C.M., Thackeray, F., Morse, S.A., McClymont, J., Stratford, D., 2010. Footprints of the Kuiseb Delta, Namibia. The Digging Stick 27, 14.Google Scholar
Boshoff, A.F., Kerley, G.I., Cowling, R.M., 2002. Estimated spatial requirements of the medium- to large-sized mammals, according to broad habitat units, in the Cape Floristic Region, South Africa. African Journal of Range and Forage Science 19, 2944.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boshoff, A.F., Landman, M., Kerley, G., 2016. Filling the gaps on the maps: historical distribution patterns of some larger mammals in part of southern Africa. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 71, 2387.10.1080/0035919X.2015.1084066CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brooke, B., 2001. The distribution of carbonate eolianite. Earth-Science Reviews 55, 135164.10.1016/S0012-8252(01)00054-XCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carr, A.S., Bateman, M.D., Cawthra, H.C., Sealy, J., 2019. First evidence for onshore marine isotope stage 3 aeolianite formation on the southern Cape coastline of South Africa. Marine Geology 407, 115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carr, A.S., Bateman, M.D., Roberts, D.L., Murray-Wallace, C.V., Jacobs, Z., Holmes, P.J., 2010. The last interglacial sea-level high stand on the southern Cape coastline of South Africa. Quaternary Research 73, 351363.10.1016/j.yqres.2009.08.006CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carruthers, J., Boshoff, A.F., Slotow, R., Biggs, H., Avery, G., Matthews, W., 2008. The elephant in South Africa: history and distribution. In: Scholes, R.J., Mennell, K.G. (Eds.), Elephant Management: A Scientific Assessment for South Africa. Witwatersrand University Press, Johannesburg, pp. 2383.10.18772/22008034792.12CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cawthra, H.C., 2012. The Cenozoic evolution of the Durban Bluff and adjacent continental shelf. Council for Geoscience Bulletin 142, 1119.Google Scholar
Cawthra, H.C., Compton, J.S., Fisher, E.C., MacHutchon, M.R., Marean, C.W., 2015. Submerged terrestrial landscape features off the South African south coast. In: Harff, J., Bailey, G., Lüth, F. (Eds.), Geology and Archaeology: Submerged Landscapes of the Continental Shelf. Special Publication 411. Geological Society of London, pp. 219–33.Google Scholar
Cawthra, H.C., Cowling, R.M., Andò, S., Marean, C.W., 2020. Geological and soil maps of the Palaeo-Agulhas Plain for the last glacial maximum. Quaternary Science Reviews 235, 105858. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2019.07.040.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cawthra, H.C., Jacobs, Z., Compton, J.S., Fisher, E.C., Karkanas, P., Marean, C.W., 2018. Depositional and sea-level history from MIS 6 (Termination II) to MIS 3 on the southern continental shelf of South Africa. Quaternary Science Reviews 181, 156172.10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.12.002CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chase, M.J.S., Schlossberg, C., Griffin, R., Bouché, P.J.C., Djene, S.W., Elkan, P.W, Ferreira, , et al. , 2016. Continent-wide survey reveals massive decline in African savannah elephants. PeerJ. 4, e2354. https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2354.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cowling, R.M., Potts, A.J., Franklin, J., Midgley, G.F., Engelbrecht, F., Marean, C.W., 2020. Describing a drowned Pleistocene ecosystem: last glacial maximum vegetation reconstruction of the Palaeo-Agulhas Plain. Quaternary Science Reviews 235, 105866. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2019.105866.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Douglas-Hamilton, I., Bhalla, S., Wittemeyer, G., Vollrath, F., 2006. Behavioural reactions of elephants towards a dying and deceased matriarch. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 100, 87102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Douglas-Hamilton, I., Burrill, A., 1991. Using elephant carcass ratios to determine population trends. African Wildlife: Research and Management 98105.Google Scholar
Eggert, L.S., Patterson, G., Maldonado, J.E., 2008. The Knysna elephants: a population study conducted using faecal DNA. African Journal of Ecology 46, 1923.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Essop, M.F., Hall-Martin, A.J., Harley, E.H., 1996. Mitochondrial DNA analysis of two southern African elephant populations. Koedoe 39, 8588.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fisher, E.C., Bar-Matthews, M., Jerardino, A., Marean, C.W., 2010. Middle and late Pleistocene paleoscape modeling along the southern coast of South Africa. Quaternary Science Reviews 29, 13821398.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleming, K., Johnston, P., Zwartz, D., Yokoyama, Y., Lambeck, K., Chappell, J., 1998. Refining the eustatic sea-level curve since the Last Glacial Maximum using far- and intermediate-field sites. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 163, 327342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fritz, H., 2017. Long-term field studies of elephants: understanding the ecology and conservation of a long-lived ecosystem engineer. Journal of Mammalogy 98, 603611.10.1093/jmammal/gyx023CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guldemond, R., Van Aarde, R., 2008. A meta-analysis of the impact of African elephants on savanna vegetation. Journal of Wildlife Management 72, 892899.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall-Martin, A.J., 1987. Role of musth in the reproductive strategy of the African elephant (Loxodonta africana). South African Journal of Science 83, 616620.Google Scholar
Hall-Martin, A.J., 1992. Distribution and status of the African elephant Loxodonta africana in South Africa, 1652–1992. Koedoe 35, 6588.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall-Martin, A.J., Van der Walt, L.A., 1984. Plasma testosterone levels in relation to musth in the male African elephant. Koedoe 27, 147149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haubold, H., Lockley, M.G., Hunt, A.P., Lucas, S.G., 1995. Lacertoid footprints from Permian dune sandstones, Cornberg and DeChelly sandstones. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 6, 235244.Google Scholar
Haynes, G., 2006. Mammoth landscapes: good country for hunter-gatherers. Quaternary International 142, 2029.10.1016/j.quaint.2005.03.002CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haynes, G., 2012. Elephants (and extinct relatives) as earth-movers and ecosystem engineers. Geomorphology 157, 99107.10.1016/j.geomorph.2011.04.045CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helm, C.W., Anderson, R.J., Buckley, L.G., Cawthra, H.C., De Vynck, J.C., 2017. Biofilm enables identification of avian trackways in late Pleistocene coastal aeolianites, South Africa. Palaeontologia Africana 52, 7884.Google Scholar
Helm, C.W., Cawthra, H.C., Combrink, X., Helm, C.J.Z., Rust, R., Stear, W., Van Den Heever, A., 2020c. Pleistocene large reptile tracks and probable swim traces on South Africa's Cape south coast. South African Journal of Science 116, 6542. https://doi.org/10.17159/sajs.2020/6542.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helm, C.W., Cawthra, H.C., Cowling, R.M., De Vynck, J.C., Lockley, M.G., Marean, C.W., Thesen, G.H.H., Venter, J.A., 2020a. Pleistocene vertebrate tracksites on the Cape south coast of South Africa and their potential palaeoecological implications. Quaternary Science Reviews 235, 105857. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2019.07.039.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helm, C.W., Cawthra, H.C., Cowling, R.M., De Vynck, J.C., Marean, C.W., McCrea, R.T., Rust, R., 2018b. Palaeoecology of giraffe tracks in late Pleistocene aeolianites on the Cape south coast. South African Journal of Science 114, 2017-0266. https://doi.org/10.17159/sajs.2018/20170266.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helm, C.W., Cawthra, H.C., De Vynck, J.C., Dixon, M., Stear, W. 2021. Elephant tracks: a biogenic cause of potholes in Pleistocene South African coastal rocks. Journal of Coastal Research 37, 5974.Google Scholar
Helm, C.W., Cawthra, H.C., De Vynck, J.C., Lockley, M.G., McCrea, R.T., Venter, J., 2019b. The Pleistocene fauna of the Cape south coast revealed through ichnology at two localities. South African Journal of Science 115, 5135. https://doi.org/10.17159/sajs.2019/5135 .Google Scholar
Helm, C.W., Cawthra, H.C., Hattingh, R., Hattingh, S., McCrea, R.T., Thesen, G.H.H., 2019a. Pleistocene trace fossils of Robberg Nature Reserve. Palaeontologia Africana 54, 3647.Google Scholar
Helm, C.W., Lockley, M.G., Cawthra, H.C., De Vynck, J.C., Helm, C.J.Z., Thesen, G.H.H. 2020b. Large Pleistocene avian tracks on the Cape south coast of South Africa. Ostrich. https://doi.org/10.2989/00306525.2020.1789772.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helm, C.W., McCrea, R.T., Cawthra, H.C., Cowling, R.M., Lockley, M.G., Marean, C.W., Thesen, G.H.H., Pigeon, T., Hattingh, S. 2018a. A new Pleistocene hominin tracksite from the Cape south coast, South Africa. Scientific Reports 8, 3772. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-22059-5 .CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helm, C.W., McCrea, R.T., Cawthra, H.C., Thesen, G.H.H., Mwankunda, J.M., 2018c. Late Pleistocene trace fossils in the Goukamma Nature Reserve, Cape south coast, South Africa. Palaeontologia Africana 52, 89101.Google Scholar
Hodgkins, J., Marean, C.W., Venter, J.A., Richardson, L., Roberts, P., Zech, J., Difford, M., et al. , 2020. An isotopic test of the seasonal migration hypothesis for large grazing ungulates inhabiting the Palaeo-Agulhas Plain. Quaternary Science Reviews 235, 106221. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2020.106221.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jacobs, Z., 2010. An OSL chronology for the sedimentary deposits from Pinnacle Point Cave 13B: a punctuated presence. Journal of Human Evolution 59, 289305.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jacobs, Z., Roberts, R.G., Lachlan, T.J., Karkanas, P., Marean, C.W., Roberts, D.L., 2011. Development of the SAR TT-OSL procedure for dating middle Pleistocene dune and shallow marine deposits along the southern Cape coast of South Africa. Quaternary Geochronology 6, 491513.Google Scholar
Kahl, M. P., Armstrong, B.D., 2002. Visual displays of wild African elephants during musth. Mammalia 66, 159171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kerley, G.I.H., Landman, M., Kruger, L., Owen-Smith, N., Balfour, D., de Boer, W.F., Gaylard, A., Lindsay, K., Slotow, R., 2009. Effects of elephants on ecosystems and biodiversity. In: Scholes, R.J., Mennell, K.G. (Eds.), Elephant Management: A Scientific Assessment for South Africa. Wits University Press, Johannesburg, pp. 146205.Google Scholar
Kerley, G.I.H., Pressey, R.L., Cowling, R.M., Boshoff, A.F., Sims-Castley, R., 2003. Options for the conservation of large and medium sized mammals in the Cape Floristic Region hotspot, South Africa. Biological Conservation 112, 169190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klein, R.G., Avery, G., Cruz-Uribe, K., Steele, T.E., 2007. The mammalian fauna associated with an archaic hominin skullcap and later Acheulean artifacts at Elandsfontein, Western Cape Province, South Africa. Journal of Human Evolution 52, 164186.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
KQED, 2009. Ice Age Bay Area. YouTube video uploaded July 23, 2009. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GqNmG1NUKdY&feature=youtu.be. Accessed May 17, 2021.Google Scholar
Langman, V.A., Roberts, T.J., Black, J., Maloiy, G.M., Heglund, N.C., Weber, J.M., Kram, R., Taylor, C.R., 1995. Moving cheaply: energetics of walking in the African elephant. Journal of Experimental Biology 198, 629632.10.1242/jeb.198.3.629CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Laporte, L.F., Behrensmeyer, A.K., 1980. Tracks and substrate reworking by terrestrial vertebrates in quaternary sediments of Kenya. Journal of Sediment Petrology 50, 13371346.Google Scholar
Laury, R.L., 1980. Paleoenvironment of a late Quaternary mammoth-bearing sinkhole deposit, Hot Springs, South Dakota. Geological Society of America Bulletin 91, 465475.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lea, P.D., 1996. Vertebrate tracks in Pleistocene eolian sand-sheet deposits of Alaska. Quaternary Research 45, 226240.10.1006/qres.1996.0023CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liebenberg, L., 2000. A Photographic Guide to Tracks and Tracking in Southern Africa. Struik Nature, Cape Town, South Africa.Google Scholar
Loarie, S.R., Van Aarde, R.J., Pimm, S.L., 2009. Elephant seasonal vegetation preferences across dry and wet savannas. Biological Conservation 142, 30993107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lockley, M.G., Cawthra, H.C., De Vynck, J.C., Helm, C.W., McCrea, R.T., Nel, R. 2019. New fossil sea turtle trackway morphotypes from the Pleistocene of South Africa highlight role of ichnology in turtle palaeobiology. Quaternary Research 92, 626640.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lockley, M.G., Helm, C.W., Cawthra, H.C., De Vynck, J.C., Perrin, M.R. 2021. Pleistocene golden mole and sand-swimming trace fossils from the Cape coast of South Africa. Quaternary Research 118. https://doi.org/10.1017/qua.2020.97.Google Scholar
Lucas, S.G., Allen, B.D., Morgan, G.S., Myers, R.G., Love, D.W., Bustos, D., 2007. Mammoth footprints from the upper Pleistocene of the Tularosa Basin, Doña Ana County, New Mexico. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 42, 149154.Google Scholar
Lucas, S.G., Heckert, A.B. 1995. Early Permian footprints and facies. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 6, 1301.Google Scholar
Malan, J.A., 1989. Lithostratigraphy of the Waenhuiskrans Formation (Bredasdorp Group). South African Committee for Stratigraphy, Lithostratigraphic Series 8. Department of Mineral and Energy Affairs, Pretoria.Google Scholar
Malan, J.A., 1991. Lithostratigraphy of the Klein Brak Formation (Bredasdorp Group). South African Committee for Stratigraphy, Lithostratigraphic Series 13. Department of Mineral and Energy Affairs, Pretoria.Google Scholar
Marean, C.W., Cawthra, H.C., Cowling, R.M., Esler, K.J., Fisher, E., Milewski, A., Potts, A.J., Singels, E., De Vynck, J., 2014. Stone Age people in a changing South African Greater Cape Floristic Region. In: Allsopp, N., Colville, J.F., Verboom, G.A. (Eds.), Fynbos: Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation of a Megadiverse Region. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, pp. 164199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marean, C.W., Cowling, R.C., Franklin, J., 2020. The Palaeo-Agulhas Plain: temporal and spatial variation in an extraordinary extinct ecosystem of the Pleistocene of the Cape Floristic Region. Quaternary Science Reviews 235, 106161. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2019.106161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Matsukawa, M., Shibata, K., 2015. Review of Japanese Cenozoic (Miocene–Modern) vertebrate tracks. Ichnos 22, 261290.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Matthews, N.A., Noble, T.A., Breithaupt, B.H., 2016. Close-range photogrammetry for 3-D ichnology: the basics of photogrammetric ichnology. In: Falkingham, P.L., Marty, D., Richter, A. (Eds.), Dinosaur Tracks: The Next Steps. Indiana University Press, Bloomington, pp. 2855.Google Scholar
McDonald, H.G., White, R.S., Lockley, M.G., Mostoe, G.E., 2007. An indexed bibliography of Cenozoic vertebrate tracks. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 42, 275302.Google Scholar
McNeil, P., Hills, L.V., Tolman, M.S, Kooyman, B., 2007. Significance of latest Pleistocene tracks, trackways, and trample grounds from southern Alberta, Canada. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 42, 209223.Google Scholar
Milàn, J., Bromley, R.G., Titschack, J., Theodorou, G., 2007. A diverse vertebrate ichnofauna from the quaternary eolian oolite, Rhodes, Greece. In: Bromley, R.G.; Buatois, L.A.; Mángano, G., Genise, J.F., Melchor, R.N. (Eds.), Sediment-Organism Interactions: A Multifaceted Ichnology. Special Publication 88. Society for Sedimentary Geology, Broken Arrow, OK, pp. 333343Google Scholar
Milàn, J., Theodorou, G., Loope, D.B., Panayides, I., Clemmesnsen, L.B., Gkioni, M., 2015. Vertebrate tracks in late Pleistocene-early Holocene (?) carbonate aeolianites, Paphos, Cyprus. Annales Societatis Geologorum Poloniae 85, 507514.Google Scholar
Molina, J.M., Alfaro, P., Moretti, M., Soria, J.M., 2002. Soft-sediment deformation structures induced by cyclic stress of storm waves in tempestites (Miocene, Guadalquivir Basin, Spain). Terra Nova 10, 145150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moolman, L., de Morney, M.A., Ferreira, S.M., Ganswindt, A., Poole, J.H., Kerley, G.I., 2019b. And then there was one: a camera trap survey of the declining population of African elephants in Knysna, South Africa. African Journal of Wildlife Research 49, 1626.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moolman, L., Ferreira, S.M., Gaylard, A., Zimmerman, D., Kerley, G.I.H., 2019a. The decline of the Knysna elephants: pattern and hypotheses. South African Journal of Science 115, 4805. https://doi.org/10.17159/sajs.2019/4805 .CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Muñiz, F., Cáceres, L.M., Rodríguez Vidal, J., Neto de Carvalho, C., Belo, J., Finlayson, C., Finlayson, G., et al, ., 2019. Following the last Neanderthals: mammal tracks in late Pleistocene coastal dunes of Gibraltar (S Iberian Peninsula). Quaternary Science Reviews 217, 297309.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Musiba, C.M., Mabula, A., Selvaggio, M., Magori, C.C., 2008. Pliocene animal trackways at Laetoli: research and conservation potential. Ichnos 15, 166178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Neto De Carvalho, C., 2009. Vertebrate tracksites from the mid–late Pleistocene eolianites of Portugal: the first record of elephant tracks in Europe. Geological Quarterly 53, 407414.Google Scholar
Newton, A.R., Shone, R.W., Booth, P.W.K., 2006. The Cape Fold Belt. In: Johnson, M.R., Annhauser, C.R., Thomas, R.J. (Eds.), The Geology of South Africa. Geological Society of South Africa and the Council for Geoscience, Johannesburg, pp. 521531.Google Scholar
Onodera, S., Hicks, T.P., 1999. Evolution of the motor system: why the elephant's trunk works like a human's hand. The Neuroscientist 5, 217226.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pillola, G.L., Zoboli, D., 2017. Dwarf mammoth footprints from the Pleistocene of Gonnesa (southwestern Sardinia, Italy). Bollettino della Societa Paleontologica Italiana 56, 5764.Google Scholar
Poole, J.H., 1987. Rutting behavior in African elephants: the phenomenon of musth. Behaviour 102, 283316.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poole, J.H., Granli, P. 2011. Signals, gestures and behaviors of African elephants. In: Moss, C.J., Croze, H.J., Lee, P.C. (Eds.), The Amboseli Elephants: A Long-Term Perspective on a Long-Lived Mammal. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, pp. 109124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poole, J.H., Kasman, L.H., Ramsay, E.C., Lasley, B.L., 1984. Musth and urinary testosterone concentrations in the African elephant (Loxodonta africana). Reproduction 70, 255260.10.1530/jrf.0.0700255CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prothero, J., 1995. Bone and fat as a function of body weight in adult mammals. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology 111, 633639.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roach, N.T., Hatala, K.T., Ostrofsky, K.R., Villmoare, B., Reeves, J.S., Du, A., Braun, D.R., Harris, J.W.K., Behrensmeyer, A.K., Richmond, B.G., 2016. Pleistocene footprints show intensive use of lake margin habitats by Homo erectus groups. Scientific Reports 6, 26374. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep26374.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roberts, D.L., Bateman, M.D., Murray-Wallace, C.V., Carr, A.S., Holmes, P.J., 2008. Last interglacial fossil elephant trackways dated by OSL/AAR in coastal aeolianites, Still Bay, South Africa. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 257, 261279.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, D.L., Cawthra, H., Musekiwa, C., 2013. Dynamics of Late Cenozoic Aeolian Deposition along the South African Coast: A Record of Evolving Climate and Ecosystems. Special Publications 388, Geological Society of London, p. 353.Google Scholar
Roberts, D.L., Karkanas, P., Jacobs, Z., Marean, C.W., Roberts, R.G., 2012. Melting ice sheets 400,000 yr ago raised sea level by 13 m: past analogue for future trends. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 357/358, 226237.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shoshani, J., 1998. Understanding proboscidean evolution: a formidable task. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 13, 480487.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sinclair, A.R.E., 1973. Population increases of buffalo and wildebeest in the Serengeti. African Journal of Ecology 11, 93107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skead, C.J., 2011. Historical Incidence of the Larger Land Mammals in the Broader Western and Northern Cape. 2nd ed. Centre for African Conservation Ecology, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, Port Elizabeth, South Africa.Google Scholar
Stewart, M., Clark-Wilson, R., Breeze, P.S., Janulis, K., Candy, I., Armitage, S.J., Ryves, D.B., et al. , 2020. Human footprints provide snapshot of last interglacial ecology in the Arabian interior. Science Advances 6, eaba8940. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aba8940.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stuart, C., Stuart, M., 2019. Stuart's Field Guide to the Tracks and Signs of Southern, Central and East African Wildlife. Struik Nature, Cape Town, South Africa.Google Scholar
Van den Heever, A., Mhlongo, R., Benadie, K., 2017. Tracker Manual: A Practical Guide to Animal Tracking in Southern Africa. Struik Nature, Cape Town, South Africa.Google Scholar
Vidya, T.N.C., Sukumar, R., 2005. Social and reproductive behaviour in elephants. Current Science 89, 12001207.Google Scholar
Walker, C., 2018. Signs of the Wild: A Field Guide to the Spoor & Signs of the Mammals of Southern Africa. Struik Nature, Cape Town, South Africa.Google Scholar
Wright, J.P., Jones, C.G., 2006. The concept of organisms as ecosystem engineers ten years on: progress, limitations, and challenges. BioScience 56, 203209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Map of the Cape south coast of South Africa, indicating the main study area and the study site.

Figure 1

Figure 2. The main palaeosurface described by Roberts et al. (2008), containing elephant and other tracks.

Figure 2

Figure 3. (A) Manus and pes pairs of fossil elephant tracks, Garden Route National Park; scale bar = 30 cm between outer black circles. (B) An elephant trackway east of Still Bay, exhibiting displacement rims and infill. (C) One of the authors measuring an underwater elephant track on the Robberg Peninsula. (D) Convolution of the bedding plane layers due to elephant tracks, seen in cross section in the Goukamma Nature Reserve; scale bar = 15 cm.

Figure 3

Figure 4. (A) Deformation of underlying layers beneath a Cretaceous dinosaur track in Western Australia; scale bar = 10 cm. (B) Substantial deformation of underlying layers beneath a Cretaceous dinosaur track in China; scale bar = 15 cm. (C) Dinoturbation in Cretaceous sediments near Broome, Western Australia.

Figure 4

Figure 5. (A) An elephant track seen in section, illustrating deformation of underlying layers. (B) Elephant transmitted tracks (indicated by white arrows) recorded on the Robberg Peninsula; scale bars = 30 cm between outer black circles. (C) The orientation of this large block (adult human figure provides scale) can be determined at a distance by noting the orientation in cross section of elephant tracks (indicated by white arrows). (D) Elephant tracks can be identified on this surface in De Hoop Nature Reserve despite erosion and poor preservation.

Figure 5

Figure 6. (A) and (B) Deep infill layers seen in cross section at sites east of Still Bay. In both cases, the track dimensions are not large enough to exclude rhinoceros or hippopotamus as trackmakers, but numerous elephant tracks are evident where these surfaces are exposed, increasing the probability that the trackmaker was a juvenile elephant. Scale bar in (B) = 10 cm.

Figure 6

Figure 7. (A), (B), (C) Eroded elephant tracks and infill layers may take on remarkable forms (indicated by white arrows); scale bars in (A) and (C) = 10 cm. (A) and (C) are in the Goukamma Nature Reserve, and (B) is east of Still Bay. (D) Potholes in linear patterns on the Cape south coast, for which elephant tracks were likely precursors.

Figure 7

Figure 8. East of Still Bay, a probable long-horned buffalo track is centrally registered within a large elephant track. Scale bar = 10 cm.

Figure 8

Figure 9. A sloping aeolianite surface in the Goukamma Nature Reserve, showing elephant tracks and two elongated grooves interpreted as possible trunk-drag impressions (indicated by arrows). (A) and (B) are facing southeast, and (C) and (D) are facing northwest; scale bars = 10 cm.

Figure 9

Figure 10. Plan of an elephant trackway and purported trunk-drag impressions in the Goukamma Nature Reserve.

Figure 10

Table 1. Track dimensions of the elephant trackway in the Goukamma Nature Reserve, Cape south coast, South Africa, from north to south.

Figure 11

Figure 11. Photogrammetry colour mesh of a purported elephant trunk-drag impression; vertical and horizontal scales are in metres. (A) 18 images were used, and the photographs were taken at an average of 56.7 cm from the surface; the reprojection error is 0.296 pix. (B) 21 images were used, and the photographs were taken at an average of 54.8 cm from the surface; the reprojection error is 0.251 pix; a portion of track 5 is also evident.

Figure 12

Figure 12. Trunk-drag impressions of L. africana, showing their serpentine nature (reproduced with the permission of A. Van den Heever).