In Cis van Vuure’s classical Retracing the aurochs it is written that the shoulder height of the aurochs nearly equaled the trunk length, in contrast to most domestic cattle where the trunk is longer. Somehow “nearly equals” became “equals” in my memory, although I read the book several times and it also cites a source that gives precise data, namely that the height of the withers to the trunk length ratio varied 1:1,02 to 1:1,1. One has to be cautious, however, because the withers height is influenced by the length of the spinal processes in the shoulder region, which may vary from individual to individual and differs between the sexes. So calculated the ratio between the height of the upper margin of the shoulder blade and the trunk length using photos of 10 aurochs skeletons in lateral view.
There is also a written remark of the trunk length of the aurochs by a person who visited living ones, Anton Schneeberger. He states in his letter to Conrad Gesner that the cows are “not as long” as the bulls.
Specimen | Sex | Ratio of shoulder blade height to trunk length |
Braunschweig | male | 1:1,14 |
Friemersdorf | male | 1:1,11 |
Hammerslöv | male | 1:1,15 |
Prejlerup | male | 1:1,06 |
Sassenberg male | male | 1:1,17 |
Store-damme | male | 1:1,17 |
Vig | male | 1:1,11 |
Sassenberg female | female | 1:1,03 |
Cambridge | ? female | 1:1,19 |
Mönchengladbach | ? female | 1:1,17 |
The Sassenberg cow is the only mounted specimen of the European aurochs which I am highly confident that it is from a cow, because of its entire morphology. For the Mönchengladbach and Cambridge specimen, I am not so sure. Especially the Cambridge one puzzles me. The morphology of its postcranial skeleton resembles that of unambiguously male specimen, such as the Prejlerup specimen, f.e. because of the relatively long and massive spinal processes in the shoulder region. The skull, however, looks very feminine compared to definitely male skulls such as the London one, because of its barely protruding orbital bosses and the overall gracile build. Also, the Cambridge skeleton is merely 145 cm tall, what would be 150-155 cm in life, which is suggestive of a cow, particularly from Northern Europe.
The Sassenberg cow has the shortest trunk, barely longer than the height of the shoulder blade. This fits the historic description by Schneeberger. As it happens, the Cambridge specimen has the greatest relative trunk length. This could have various reasons:
- The Cambridge skeleton is from an – extraordinarily small – bull
- Trunk length is not a reliable indicator of sex in the aurochs
- The sample size is too small to determine anything
Actually, I consider the third reason the most likely one. Guessing by eye, it was always my impression that in domestic cattle the cows are shorter than the bulls too, but I have no reference at hand confirming this. It would be interesting to investigate this thoroughly with osteometric measurments.
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ReplyDeleteDo you have a photo of the Mönchengladbach specimen or any more info about it?
ReplyDeleteIt's the same as the Niersaue specimen, I just call it the Mönchengladbach specimen because that's the museum where the specimen is on display.
DeleteThe Mammals of Soviet Union reports that the last aurochs of Jaktorów would have not exceeded 150 cm in the bulls. The horn of the last bull (which died in 1620 in Jaktorów) measures only 46 cm.
ReplyDeleteDo you think it is likely of the smaller size of these last aurochs?
It would be interesting to know what that book is basing that information on; as far as I know, the Jaktorow aurochs were never measured and reports explicitly state they were much larger than domestic cattle. There, however, some sources which claim the last aurochs were merely as large as domestic cattle, which is contradicted by the evidence. The horn of the last bull is small indeed, but it is not recorded how old the bull was at time of death and there also was some domestic cattle influence.
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