PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

A sunken ship of the desert at the river Danube in Tulln, Austria.

  • Alfred Galik,
  • Elmira Mohandesan,
  • Gerhard Forstenpointner,
  • Ute Maria Scholz,
  • Emily Ruiz,
  • Martin Krenn,
  • Pamela Burger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0121235
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
p. e0121235

Abstract

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Rescue excavations recovered a skeleton that resurrect the contemporary dramatic history of Austria in the 17th century as troops besieged Vienna in the second Osmanic-Habsburg war. Unique for Central Europe is the evidence of a completely preserved camel skeleton uncovered in a large refuse pit. The male individual of slender stature indicates a few but characteristic pathological changes revealing not a beast of burden but probably a valuable riding animal. Anatomical and morphometrical analyses suggest a hybrid confirmed by the ancient DNA analyses resulting in the presence of a dromedary in the maternal and a Bactrian camel in the paternal line.