This paper describes the skeleton of Canis lupus found in Layer 7 of Grotta Mora Cavorso (Latium, central Italy), correlated with the MIS 3. Research on the deposition dynamics of this find is still in progress, but the action of human or other predators can be excluded. This specimen consists of a near complete articulated skeleton, lacking only the calvarium. The age at death was estimated at around six years old. Preliminary morphometric analyses and comparisons with samples of Italian Late Pleistocene wolf and extant Apennine wolf (C. lupus italicus) remains, show that the dimensions of the teeth and long bones are among the biggest known from the Italian Late Pleistocene and larger than the extant Apennine wolf.
Wolf, MIS 3, Morphometric variability, Taphonomy, Palaeontology