Cave lion tooth
Kent’s Cavern is a natural system of caves near Torquay. It was called Kent’s Hole until 1865. Excavations revealed ice-age creatures, and some of the earliest human remains and stone tools in the country. Fossil remains date to the Pleistocene 2.6 million to 11,700 years ago. During the last Ice Age red sediments called 'cave earth' flowed into the cave. They covered earlier layers of crystalline stalagmites, breccia and animal remains. When archaeologists excavated, they found the cave earth to be rich in human and animal bones.
Locality: Long Arcade
Series: 48
Parallel: 13
Level: 2
Yard: 1R
Deposit: Cave earth
Locality: Long Arcade
Series: 48
Parallel: 13
Level: 2
Yard: 1R
Deposit: Cave earth
Object Summary
- Accession Loan No.
- 31/2006/135
- Collection Class
- Fossils
- Collection Area Region
- Northern Europe
- Common Name
- cave lion tooth
- Simple Name
- fossil: mammal
- Period Classification
- Pleistocene (2.6 mya - 10,000 years)
- Production Town
- Production Person Initials
- Production Person Surname
- Production Year Low
- Production Year High
