byJeanna Bryner
A
bulldozer operator at a sand pit in northwestern Oklahoma got quite a
surprise this month when he spotted a huge skull that belonged to a
Columbian mammoth.
These giants were plentiful across the plains of Oklahoma during the Pleistocene epoch, which lasted from about 1.8 million to 11,700 years ago, said Leland Bement of the Oklahoma Archaeological Survey.
The
discovery was not unheard of, as the Survey typically receives about
three "mammoth-sighting" calls a year, Bement said. That made it now
less exciting, though. "Archaeological fieldwork is always exciting. You
never know what you are going to find," Bement told Live Science in an
email.
He
added, "When it comes to mammoth finds, we are always on the lookout
for the next one that has projectile points or stone tools associated
with it to indicate that the animal was killed and butchered. We have so
few of these sites across North America and only one so far in
Oklahoma."
The
skull had been deposited on the sandbar of a river channel, the
archaeologists said. So far, the archaeologists have unearthed the
animal's skull with a single tooth in place; apparently, another tooth
had been removed from the skull during the clearing of the sand.
"We
don't know the cause of death. There is no sign that people killed or
butchered it," Bement told Live Science in an email. "Its skull was
washed around in the river. The rest of the animal could be anywhere."
Though
the scientists have not pinpointed an exact age for the skull, they
know it’s more than 11,000 years old — the period when mammoths and
other megafauna went extinct at the end of the Pleistocene.
Scientists have put forth several reasons for the extinctions, ranging from rapid climate warming to ice age human hunters. Others have suggested a perfect storm of culprits. One group of dwarf mammoths is thought to have survived in the Arctic, on Wrangel Island, until about 3,700 years ago.
Like other Columbian mammoths (Mammuthus columbi),
this one was not the cold-adapted type and preferred more temperate
stomping grounds in southern and central North America. The woolly
mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), the kind portrayed in the "Ice Age" movies, would have called the chilly tundra home.
The
Columbian variety was also much larger than the woollies, with
Columbian males reaching up to twice the size of woolly males, according
to Hendrik Poinar, an evolutionary geneticist at McMaster University in
Hamilton, Canada. Columbian mammoths also arrived in North America
about 1.5 million years ago, whereas woolly mammoths stepped onto the
continent some 400,000 years ago, said Poinar, who spoke with Live
Science in 2011.
Finding mammoth bones, while a mammoth discovery, seems relatively common across the United States. This past January, a construction crew discovered the femur of a mammoth (possibly a Columbian mammoth) under the Oregon State University's football field. Last September, two Michigan farmers found a mammoth's skull and tusks while they were installing a drainage pipe. And, in October 2014, a volunteer "paleontologist" unearthed the skeleton of a mammoth
on the banks of a reservoir in Idaho. That skeleton dated back more
than 72,000 years, said the scientists involved in the excavation.
Next,
the researchers, including Oklahoma State University geographer Carlos
Cordova, will analyze the mammoth teeth for particles from plants
encased in tartar buildup, Bement said. "That will tell us what the
mammoth was eating and also help in reconstructing the environment at
the time he lived."
The
findings will be included in a broader study, by doctoral student Tom
Cox, of the distribution of mammoths in Oklahoma, he added.
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