Mastodons Made an Early Exit from the North
American mastodons in the North died out much earlier than had been thought.
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Mastodons and mammoths, two mighty elephant species, roamed North American for millions of years before humans got here. But mastodon fossils in the Arctic and sub-Arctic have presented a problem for paleontologists. These fossils had been dated to about 20,000 years ago, a period at the height of the last Ice Age, when the Arctic was locked in cold, and the ice-free areas were a steppe-tundra grassland. But unlike mammoths, mastodons don't graze on grass - they're adapted to browsing forest and shrubland. So what were these animals doing in such an unsuitable environment? Dr. Grant Zazula, the Yukon Government Paleontologist, and his colleagues, re-dated dozens of mastodon fossils and solved this problem. The fossils turn out to be much older than previously thought - probably by many tens of thousands of years. This suggests that mastodons were only in the North in the warm interglacial period between the Ice Ages - and further suggests that humans didn't wipe them out in the North.
Related Links
- Paper in PNAS
- American Museum of Natural History release
- CBC News story
- Globe and Mail story