NEW analysis of ancient bones and fossils found in a Highland cave has revealed evidence that could suggest polar bears once roamed Scotland.

Experts at the University of Aberdeen and National Museums Scotland have managed to re-evaluate fossils collected at the Inchnadamph "Bone Caves" in Sutherland with advanced technology.

Analysis of samples uncovered evidence of fish in the diet of animals that, until now, had been identified as brown bears.

Working with University of Edinburgh Master’s student Holland Taekema, and as part of a larger review on the history of bears in Scotland, the researchers compiled new stable isotope data – a technique for the reconstruction of human and animal diets in past populations.

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They found that for three samples belonging to bears which dated to around 30,000 to 50,000 years old – well before humans occupied the land – the diet was made up almost entirely of marine fish or other seafoods.

This finding, say the researchers, who published their results in Annales Zoologici Fennici, is markedly different to the meat and plant-based diet typical of modern brown bears, or those found in the British Isles prior to their extinction in the last 1000 years, and may even point to the presence of polar bears living in Scotland during the last Ice Age.

Professor Kate Britton, from the University of Aberdeen, said: “We have identified several samples which stick out like a sore thumb both from the diets of other bears living in Scotland thousands of years ago and from what we’d expect of today’s brown bears.

“Instead of consuming the meat of land-based animals, plants, or even a little salmon, like contemporary brown bears, these bears appear to have lived almost exclusively on seafood.

Polar bear once roamed Scotland (sourced)

“This is at odds with what we know about brown bear diets today, but also across the ages. Even modern grizzly bears – known to gorge seasonally on salmon in some places – don't show anything close to this level of seafood consumption in their diet.

She added that the diet was "so unusual" that experts have to now re-evaluate what they know about brown bear feeding or question whether the fossils are brown bears at all.

A similar theory was mooted back in the 1990s following the discovery of a bear’s skull with some polar bear-like features, although no further evidence for polar bears in prehistoric Scotland has been found, and more modern archaeological techniques have since called the radiocarbon dating of that particular skull into question.

The team will now conduct further work to address questions about the known presence of brown bear DNA in modern polar bears and polar bear DNA in the wider population of Ice Age European brown bears, which has been documented in other studies.

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Dr Andrew Kitchener, principal curator of vertebrates at National Museums Scotland, where the fossil bears are held, added: “When experiencing this habitat expansion, the polar bears may well have encountered the brown bears which inhabited Scotland at this time. As we know that polar bears and brown bears can successfully interbreed today where their ranges overlap, it presents interesting questions about the ancestry of bears that later roamed our islands.”

The team is now conducting DNA analysis of the samples with collaborators in Sweden to determine the species of the bears from the Assynt Bone Caves and to ascertain if they are brown bears, polar bears, or even hybrids.

This work will be accompanied by the new physical study of the bones themselves using advanced methods, research which will be undertaken by a newly appointed research fellow, Dr Alicia Sanz Royo, at the University of Aberdeen.