Hi Anne,
The saiga antelope is in almost constant movement and does not handle barriers very well. That makes it both essentially non-resident (almost perpetually migratory) and not only open terraine, but pretty much restricted to unbroken open terraine.
So it would never have been a year around food source and even when present would almost certainly have required a team hunting approach. Would large amounts of saiga meat on a few days a year or perhaps even every few years have left any kind of readable signature?
The woman who left the fossils may simply not have been around when those who left the saiga bones were.
Interestingly modern saiga, although very cold tolerant are not currently arctic animals. For a modern range map see
http://www.ultimateungulate.com/Artiodactyla/Saiga_tatarica.htmlJacques probably knows about this website:
http://www.beringia.com/02/02maina11.htmlwhich discusses ice age saiga distribution.
See also:
http://www.iccs.org.uk/papers/mammrev.pdfwhich describes modern saiga habitat:
"The Saiga is regarded as a species of the steppe (Kucheruk, 1959), the desert (Vasenko, 1950;
Afanas’ev, 1960; Reimov, 1981), the semi-desert (Rakov, 1956; Zhirnov, 1982) and both the semidesert
and desert (Sludskii, 1961; Fadeev & Sludskii, 1982; Bekenov, 1988). "
Saiga range is of a quite specifc type and there is little tolerance in the animal for a great deal of variation in that.
Unless glacial maximum saigas were dramatically different from the current, highly-derived type, that points to extensive desert and semi desert areas across Eurasia dominated by continental climates with light snow fall, a surprisingly uniform expression over very large areas of Eurasia from Britain to Beringinia.
Perhaps the Saiga would be a better barometer of Eurasian climate going into and through the last glacial maximum than the more adaptable reindeer. It seems to have colonized widely during that period, apparently falling back, as the last glacial maximum ended, into something approaching what is probably both its recent range and the range it had prior. Although that is harsh, it is definitely not arctic or even subarctic.
Dale
Richard and AWSX:
I can't get the full article either(sniff!), but it would be interesting to know exactly what she *did* eat. OTOH, maybe the "Magdalenians" knew saiga were tough and untasty or something. I really don't know. What I do know is, that any time you have a bunch of people living in a climate where winters are long and cold, they are going to eat a *lot* of meat. And not many plants. It doesn't matter if it's Neandertals, "Magdalenian" moderns, or Inuit people. The results are all fairly similar. And they tell you more about the climate and what's available locally, than they do about the people eating the stuff.
Anne G