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Vulture Culture
Scientific American
|December 2025
Human artifacts turn up in ancient scavengers' nests
A grass shoe more than 600 years old
IT TURNS OUT the bearded vulture-also called the quebrantahuesos, or bonebreaker-isn't just a carrion scavenger. It's also a keen collector of human ephemera.
This habit has given researchers in southern Spain a unique boon: "time capsules" of human activity that stretch back more than 600 years in the vultures' remote cliffside nesting caves. The raptors often reuse sites for generations.
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