Many fossils of prehistoric fauna are known from the site, including
Ice Age taxa such as the
saber-toothed cat,
mastodon,
short-faced bear,
American cheetah, and
Wheatley's ground sloth. Some extinct species are also exclusive to the site, many of them being described by Edward Drinker Cope during the late 19th century. In addition to the prehistoric animals, a myriad of early records of living mammals have been unearthed from the locale such as
American black bears,
North American river otters, and
Gray foxes, This accords with the global cooling and glaciation of the Lower to Middle Pleistocene, which preceded the final glacial age of the Upper Pleistocene in the
Rancholabrean stage. Some of the species during the Irvingtonian present at Port Kennedy such as the saber-toothed cat and short-faced bear came from smaller forms of their respective genera, with sizes increasing during the Rancholabrean. Fossils from Port Kennedy Bone Cave are not exclusively from mammals however, with many fossils from
turkeys,
snakes,
turtles, and a
unique giant tortoise reported. Notably, Port Kennedy bears a large menagerie of extinct
beetles. All of the beetles were briefly described by George Horn in 1874, but little new insight into the remains has been made. Plant fossils too have been recovered, including
mosses and a variety of trees. ==References==