Tight Entrance Cave (Unit D)
Basic information
Sample name: Tight Entrance Cave (Unit D)

Sample aka: Unit Glory

Reference: G. J. Prideaux, G. A. Gully, A. M. C. Couzens, L. K. Ayliffe, N. R. Jankowski, Z. Jacobs, R. G. Roberts, J. C. Hellstrom, M. K. Gagan, and L. M. Hatcher. 2010. Timing and dynamics of Late Pleistocene mammal extinctions in southwestern Australia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 107(51):22157-22162 [ER 3720]
Geography
Country: Australia

State: Western Australia



Coordinate: 34° 4' S, 115° 1' E
Coordinate basis: stated in text

Time interval: Late Pleistocene

Section: 3720

Unit number: 1

Unit order: below to above

Max Ma: 0.119

Min Ma: 0.089

Age basis: OSL

Geography comments: "Tight Entrance Cave (TEC) lies in the Leeuwin–Naturaliste Region, in southwestern Western Australia".
"The chronology of the TEC faunal succession was established via uranium-series, optically stimulated luminescence, and radiocarbon dating of samples excavated from a 21 square metre by 1.8 metre deep pit".
Unit D dates from 119 ± 2 ka to 89 ± 6 ka.

Environment
Lithology: sandstone

Taphonomic context: pitfall trap

Habitat comments: Tight Entrance Cave occurs within the Tamala Limestone, a coarse to medium-grained aeolian calcarenite".
"The ten superposed strata are composed predominantly of ‘clean’ quartz sands. Most units are separated by marker layers composed of moonmilk and limestone clasts, which accumulated as a slow ‘rain’ from the ceiling during hiatuses in sediment infilling".
"Most animals in the deposit were evidently pitfall victims, falling in alongside sediments and charcoal that were washed in via now-blocked solution pipes, although tooth marks on some bones suggest that carnivores played a minor accumulating role".

Methods
Life forms: rodents,other large mammals,other small mammals,birds

Sampling methods: quarry,screenwash

Sample size: 1215 specimens

Years: 1996-2008

Sampling comments: "The Prideaux-Flinders University excavation commenced in January–February 1996. The excavation area was divided into a series of variably sized grids, with excavation proceeding according to unit using standard paleontological methods. Excavated sediment was sieved and resultant residues of small vertebrate remains then dried and sorted (picked) for taxonomically identifiable remains. Larger bones were cleaned, dried and stabilized with polyvinyl butyrate dissolved in acetone".
Prideaux et al. (2010) did not report the number of identified specimens. The counts below were obtained by the sample enterer during a July 2022 visit to the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Western Australian Museum, where the specimens were reposited.

Metadata
Sample number: 3951

Contributor: Benjamin Carter

Enterer: Benjamin Carter

Created: 2022-07-21 17:37:00

Modified: 2023-05-30 01:01:35

Abundance distribution
34 species
6 singletons
total count 1215
geometric series index: 50.0
Fisher's α: 6.492
geometric series k: 0.8347
Hurlbert's PIE: 0.8062
Shannon's H: 2.1317
Good's u: 0.9951
Each square represents a species. Square sizes are proportional to counts.
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