Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T11:54:25.362Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Dung of Mammuthus in the Arid Southwest, North America

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Jim I. Mead
Affiliation:
Center for the Study of Early Man, Institute for Quaternary Studies, 495 College Ave., University of Maine, Orono, Maine 04473 USA
Larry D. Agenbroad
Affiliation:
Quaternary Studies Program, Department of Geology, Box 6030, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona 86011 USA
Owen K. Davis
Affiliation:
Laboratory of Paleoenvironmental Studies, Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721 USA
Paul S. Martin
Affiliation:
Laboratory of Paleoenvironmental Studies, Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721 USA

Abstract

The discovery of a unique organic deposit in a dry cave on the Colorado Plateau, southern Utah, permits the first comparison of the physical characteristics and the diet of the dung of the extinct mammoths from the arid Southwest, North America, with that of mammoths from Siberia and northern China, the only other known locations of such remains. The deposit buried beneath sand and rockfall is composed primarily of mammoth dung, estimated at over 300 m3. Radiocarbon dates on dung boluses indicate that the mammoths frequented the cave between approximately 14,700 and 11,000 yr B.P. (the range of ages at 2σ). The desiccated boluses, measuring approximately 230 × 170 × 85 mm, are nearly identical in size to dung from extant elephants. The largest contents in the dung are stalks measuring 60 × 4.5 mm. Grasses and sedges dominated the diet, although woody species were commonly eaten.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
University of Washington

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Agenbroad, L. D. 1984 New World mammoth distribution. Martin, P. S., Klein, R. G. Quaternary Extinctions: A Prehistoric Revolution, Univ. of Arizona Press Tucson 90 108 Google Scholar
Agenbroad, L. D., Mead, J. I., Martin, P. S., Davis, O. W. 1984 Chronology and Diet of Mammuthus from Eurasia and Temperate North America. Paper presented at the 27th International Geological Congress, Moscow, USSR Google Scholar
Betancourt, J. L. 1984 Late Quaternary plant zonation and climate in southeastern Utah. Great Basin Naturalist, 44 1 35 Google Scholar
Davis, O. K., Agenbroad, L. D., Martin, P. S., Mead, J. I. 1984 The Pleistocene dung blanket of Bechan Cave, Utah. Genoways, H. H., Dawson, M. R. Contributions in Quaternary Vertebrate Paleontology: A Volume in Memorial of John E. Guilday, Vol. 8 267 282 Carnegie Museum of Natural History Special PublicationGoogle Scholar
Davis, O. K., Mead, J. I., Martin, P. S., Agenbroad, L. D. 1985 Riparian plants were a major component of the diet of mammoths of southern Utah. Current Research in the Pleistocene, 2 81 82 Google Scholar
Gorlova, R. N. 1982 Large remains of plants from the stomach of the Shandrin Mammoth. Trudy Zoologicheskogo Instituta, 3 34 35 Google Scholar
Hansen, R. M. 1980 Late Pleistocene plant fragments in the dungs of herbivores at Cowboy Cave. Jennings, J. D. Cowboy Cave, Vol. 104 179 189 Univ. of Utah Anthropological PapersGoogle Scholar
Jennings, J. D. 1980 Cowboy Cave, Vol. 104 Univ. of Utah Anthropological PapersGoogle Scholar
Kurtén, B., Anderson, E. 1980 Pleistocene Mammals of North America, Columbia Univ. Press New York Google Scholar
Liu, T.-S., Li, X.-G. 1984 Mammoths in China. Martin, P. S., Klein, R. G. Quaternary Extinctions: A Prohistorie Revolution, Univ. of Arizona Press Tucson 517 527 Google Scholar
Long, A., Martin, P. S. 1974 Death of American ground sloths. Science (Washington, D.C.), 186 638 640 Google Scholar
Martin, P. S., Sabels, B. E., Shutler, D. 1961 Rampart Cave coporolite and ecology of the Shasta ground sloth. American Journal of Science, 259 102 127 Google Scholar
Mead, J. I., Agenbroad, L. D., Martin, P. S., Davis, O. K. 1984 The mammoth and sloth dung from Bechan Cave in southeastern Utah. Current Research, 1 79 80 Google Scholar
Spaulding, W. G., Leopold, E. P., Van Devender, T. R. 1983 Late Wisconsin paleoecology of the American Southwest. Porter, S. C. The Late-Quaternary Environments of the United States, Vol. 1 Univ. of Minnesota Press Minneapolis 259 293 “The Late Pleistocene of the United States: A Review”Google Scholar
Spaulding, W. G., Martin, P. S. 1979 Ground sloth dung of the Guadalupe Mountains. Genoways, H. H., Baker, R. J. Biological Investigations in the Guadalupe Mountains, National Park, Texas, . National Park Service Proceedings and Transactions Series Number Four.259 269 Google Scholar
Spaulding, W. G., Petersen, K. L. 1980 Late Pleistocene and early Holocene paleoecology of Cowboy Cave. Jennings, J. D. Cowboy Cave, Vol. 104 163 177 Univ. of Utah Anthropological PapersGoogle Scholar
Thompson, R. S., Van Devender, T. R., Martin, P. S., Foppe, T., Long, A. 1980 Shasta ground sloth (Nothrotheriops shastense Hoffstetter) at Shelter Cave. New Mexico: Environment, diet, and extinction. Quaternary Research, 14 360 376 Google Scholar
Ukraintseva, V. V. 1979 Vegetation of warm intervals of late Pleistocene and the extinction of some large herbivorous mammals. Botanicheskiy Zhurnal, 318 330 Google Scholar
Van Devender, T. R., Spaulding, W. G. 1979 Development of vegetation and climate in the south-western United States. Science (Washington, D.C.), 204 701 710 Google Scholar
Wing, L. D., Buss, I. O. 1970 Elephants and forests. Wildlife Monographs, 19 1 92 Google Scholar