Fuente: University of Iowa  - Research
  Expuesto el: viernes, 24 de agosto de 2012 12:57
  Autor: cclair
  Asunto: Two mammoths are better than one
| By:  MIles Dietz | 2012.08.24    | 11:17 AM 
 A team led by the    University of Iowa has unearthed some remains of a second mammoth, a rarity    for a single site located in the Midwest, scientists associated with the dig    announced Friday. The paleontologists    working at a farm near Oskaloosa last weekend discovered a right mammoth    scapula, the second such bone found at the site, confirming the existence of    another mammoth. The team also uncovered a section of skull and an intact,    embedded tooth that may belong to either mammoth or perhaps be associated    with a third individual. In all, the researchers have dug up more than 50    bones, including ribs, vertebrae, and leg bones. Whether the two mammoths    are the same species and whether they lived, and died, in the same spot at    the same time will need to await for chemical testing on the specimens. “The confirmation of a    second mammoth at the site just adds to our excitement about the possible    research that can be done here, with new questions to be answered on the    environment these animals lived and died in and what drew the animals to this    location,” says Sarah Horgen, education coordinator at the UI Museum of    Natural History who is leading the excavation. The dig began in April,    about three years after a local farmer stumbled upon what looked to be a    massive bone sticking out of an eroded riverbank. What he discovered was an    approximately 4-foot-long femur that belonged to a mammoth that called Iowa    home at least 10,000 years ago. The farmer, who does not want his name    publicized nor the location of the dig to be identified, approached the UI    Museum of Natural History to help excavate the area and was pleased to gain    the expertise of UI scientists in exchange for the chance to do research on    the specimen and analysis of the environment in which the animal lived. 
 At the site last weekend,    the scientists turned up a second right scapula, slightly smaller than the    first. Holmes Semken, emeritus    professor of geoscience at the UI, recognized the two scapulae as being the    same side but referred them to Chris Widga, an expert on fossil mammoths at    the Illinois State Museum, for confirmation. Widga responded: “They look like    they are same side, different sizes. You have two critters!” A discovery of a pair of    mammoths in the same spot is rare, Widga says. “I believe there are only    eight to 10 localities in our Midwest database that have more than a single    animal,” he says. On Monday, less than a    day after the second mammoth was confirmed, the researchers found a section    of skull and an intact, embedded tooth. “The discovery of the    tooth significantly adds to the research potential of this site, especially    getting an actual date on the animal and the age of the individual,” Horgen    says. Just as important to the    researchers is a tree stump rooted in the same layer of sediment as the    partial skull and tooth. “The stump is an    important part of deciphering the site’s history,” says Art Bettis, associate    professor of geoscience and academic coordinator of the Environmental    Sciences Program at the UI. “It appears to be rooted in place so obtaining a    radiocarbon date from it will provide a minimum age for the sediment it is    rooted in (and that one of the mammoth bones is buried in) and a maximum age    for the sediment that buried the stump. Also, the stump and other fossil    plant remains collected from the site will inform us about the environment at    the time the mammoths were living in the area.” "It’s becoming    increasingly clear that the geology of the site is a lot more complex than we    originally thought. It has been a very active valley for at least 10,000    years and the bones have been moved around by more than one flood,” says David    Brenzel of Indian Creek Nature Center, one of the project leaders. That    complexity may mean the excavation takes longer than the organizers expected,    but the happy tradeoff is that it could well increase the site’s scientific    importance. The museum and the many volunteers involved in the project are    looking forward to continued excavation opportunities and to learning more    about these mammoths and their environment. The UI-led excavation has    involved partnerships with various institutions and local organizations,    including William Penn University in Oskaloosa, Iowa State University, the    Office of the State Archaeologist, and the Cedar Valley Rock and Mineral    Society. High school teachers, students, and residents also have participated    in the dig. “This excavation is    providing an incredible opportunity for environmental research and    interdisciplinary collaborations across the university and beyond, as well as    a one-of-a-kind, hands-on educational and outreach opportunity that can be    extended to Iowans of all ages,” Horgen notes. 
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