Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

THE WACO MAMMOTH NATIONAL MONUMENT MAY REPRESENT A DIMINISHED WATERING-HOLE SCENARIO BASED ON PRELIMINARY EVIDENCE OF POST-MORTEM SCAVENGING

18

Citations

36

References

2016

Year

Abstract

Abstract: The Waco Mammoth National Monument (WMNM) potentially represents the only recovered Columbian mammoth (Mammuthus columbi) herd to date, but the “herd” interpretation is dependent on the demographics of the accumulation as well as a catastrophic kill mechanism. The demographics are consistent with an extant elephant herd that is lacking only infants, and the generally accepted cause of death is a catastrophic flood and rapid burial based primarily on fossil articulation and associations with an ancient river channel and aquatic fauna. Herein we present new ichnological evidence of post-mortem biogenic bone modification contrary to a flood scenario with rapid burial. Traces on bone include branching furrows (Corrosichnia type), paired grooves (Machichnus regularis and M. bohemicus), arcuate grooves that penetrate the cortical material (Brutalichnus brutalis), roughly triangular punctures with jagged margins (Nihilichnus nihilicus), and hemispherical borings (Cubiculum isp.). The branching furrows ...

References

YearCitations

Page 1