Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Movie Science: Alpha

I saw the movie Alpha with friends last Saturday night. When my friends and I go see movies, we whisper to each other the whole time, pointing out flaws in both the plot and the science it implies. Alpha was a rare treat for me: a movie that highlighted large-scale terrain and large, extinct animals. I knew I would like it.

The movie begins with a sequence of landscape shots, some with animals. The first animals we see are woolly mammoths, traveling in a characteristic herd. A few seconds later, a small group of woolly rhinoceros move through what appears to be a glacier-scarred landscape. Hyena and wolf packs prowl and vocalize. Words appear on the screen informing us that the setting is Europe, 20,000 years ago.

With a date and general location, it is now straightforward to examine the science behind the plot. 20,000 years ago puts the movie near the end of the Pleistocene period, otherwise known by its more famous alias, the "Ice Age." There's a lot to say about the science behind the many ice ages of Earth, so we'll save that for another blog post. This one will focus on the animals seen in the movie, and whether or not they belong there.

First up is identifying the animals seen in the opening sequence. Elasmotherium could be the woolly rhinoceros, as it lived in Europe in the Pleistocene, but the youngest fossils date from 29,000 years ago, slightly before the movie's setting. Another genus of animals, Stephanorhinos, also lived in continental Europe around the same time, but it's not as woolly as the ones in the movie, and their horns are a bit short. My guess is that the animals are Elasmotherium, and maybe they are the last of their kind alive. In any case, it checks out.
American Mammoth skeleton on display at the George C. Page Museum. Photo credit: J. Noviello


The most iconic animal of the Pleistocene is the mammoth, and it's no surprise those animals appear early in the film (though it's a shame that they aren't seen again). The oldest woolly mammoth fossils are found in east Asia. From there mammoths migrated out, eventually evolving into a few different species. Europe was definitely one of those places, as their bones are fairly common in many countries, and mammoths are seen in cave paintings made by ancient humans. While most mammoths were extinct by 10,000 years ago, small populations of isolated animals may have survived until as late as 4,000 years ago. One quick note is that the mastodon is a totally different animal from the mammoth, and only found (so far) in north and central America. This one too checks out.

The humans in the movie (which are very likely true Homo sapiens, even though Neanderthals certainly inhabited the area) are first seen hunting buffalo. This checks out as well, as there are many different species of bison in the Pleistocene fossil record. The length and curvature of the horns, as well as the size of the bison itself, at first made me think of Bison latifrons, but that animal only lived in North America. A better choice for the buffalo hunted in the movie is the steppe bison, Bison priscus, as it was a widespread species and definitely lived in Europe; it also makes many appearances in cave paintings, especially at the Cave of Lascaux in France. This checks out too.

From: https://www.lascaux.fr/en/prepare-your-visit/visit-lascaux/lascaux-2
Wolves and hyenas also check out, though the animals seen in the movies are their modern-day counterparts. Cave hyenas were massive, about twice the size of extant hyenas. Judging from the presence of bones in different caves, it appears that cave hyenas and humans actively hunted each other, or at least scavenged from each other's kills. These hyenas lived across Europe and Asia until about 20,000 years ago, after which their populations severely declined. In any case, this too checks out. Of course wolves check out because we know that dogs are descended from wolves, so the question becomes what kind of wolves these are. While I initially thought they could be dire wolves, they are only found in North America. The wolves in the movie are probably simple cave wolves.

Finally, there is the closest thing to a villain in the movie: the saber-tooth cat. While we only are ever shown a shadowy outline of the beast that kills a hunter early in the film, its profile is unmistakable. Sabre-tooth cats (the most famous of which is Smilodon fatalis, though there are a few) were fearsome predators that went extinct about 10,000 years ago, so the timeline checks out. Now onto where they lived. The most famous location for their bones is the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles, California, but they are found as far south as Argentina. While saber-tooth cats were thought to be extinct in Europe as early as 300,000 years ago, a new jawbone discovered in the Netherlands has been dated to as late as 28,000 years ago, significantly later than what scientists originally thought! Therefore, while it is far more likely that saber-tooth cats lived in the Americas around the time of the movie, it is not impossible they were also in Europe. This checks out, albeit tenuously.

Maybe it's because I'm a scientist at heart, and that prehistoric animals are very close to my heart, but while watching this movie, I automatically evaluated it. I try to remember that it's been made for entertainment purposes, not for education. Even so I can appreciate attention to detail, and I think Alpha did a good job overall representing the paleobiology of Pleistocene Europe. And, if I may say so myself, the movie itself was good too.

Sources:
https://www.nature.com/news/sabre-toothed-cats-prowled-europe-200-000-years-after-supposedly-going-extinct-1.22861
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cave_hyena
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steppe_bison
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megafaunal_wolf#cite_note-goldfuss1823-4
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woolly_mammoth
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elasmotherium

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