Guardian: [Remains of woolly mammoth found on Devon building site
Bones of ice age mammoth, bison, rhinoceros, wolf and hyena uncovered by digger on outskirts of Plymouth]
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2022/feb/03/remains-of-woolly-mammoth-found-on-devon-building-site
>The remains of a woolly mammoth, rhinoceros, bison, wolf and hyena have been found in a cave system uncovered by a digger during the building of a new town in the south-west of England.
Experts said the find at Sherford, a 5,500-home development on the outskirts of Plymouth, was exceptional and gave an astonishing glimpse into the megafauna that roamed what is now Devon between 30,000 and 60,000 years ago.
More than 200 clusters of bones have been carefully removed from the cave and they will be examined to try to help paint a picture of what life was like in ice age Britain.
The samples taken from the site have so far uncovered:
Partial remains of a woolly mammoth, including a tusk, molar tooth and other bones
Partial remains of a woolly rhinoceros, including an incomplete skull and lower jaw
A virtually complete wolf skeleton
Partial remains of hyena, horse, reindeer, mountain hare and red fox
Bones of various small mammals such as bats and shrews. It is anticipated that further bones of small mammals will be identified during post-excavation laboratory
analysis.<
This is interesting. I was curious about the context of human settlement in England
and found that "England became inhabited (by humans) more than 800,000 years
ago..." It must be true since I read it here on the internet!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_England