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Construction Project Unearths Unusual Burial Site Of Mastodons

A group of mastodons roamed around the Midwest about 10,000 to 20,000 in a different era, but the age of the bones are unknown.

A construction project in Grand Rapids, Michigan, that seemed fairly straightforward went awry in the best way possible earlier this month when workers digging a culvert discovered the ancient bones of a juvenile mastodon.

Cory Redman, science curator at the Grand Rapids Public Museum, had no idea what to expect when he was called out to identify the bones.

“[I] figured it might be maybe two bones, maybe five, that’s generally how these things go once we get on site,” Redman told AccuWeather Prime‘s Adam Del Rosso. “We quickly realized it was much more of a skeleton. And so that’s when it became really, really exciting.”

Redman said that based on an initial estimate, the skeleton is between 40% and 60% complete, but it could be more or less once workers at the museum’s archive research center fully analyze and reconstruct it.

On that day, Aug. 9, 2018, file photo, workers reassemble a cast of a mastodon skeleton inside the University of Michigan’s new Biological Sciences Building in Ann Arbor, Michigan. MIKE HOUSEHOLDER/ACCUWEATHER

“One of the things that makes this find unique, besides being local, is all the bones appear to come from a single juvenile mastodon,” Redman told The Detroit Free Press.

Mastodons are a group of large animals that roamed mainly in the Midwest about 10,000 to 20,000 years ago. Redman said if you were to picture a hairy elephant, you wouldn’t be too far off.

Mastodons and woolley mammoths are rather distinct from each other, but they did sometimes occupy the same habitats, according to the National Park Service. Although both were massive, Redman said the former are much more stout and long compared to their woolley counterparts, who were much taller.

As for how long ago this specimen lived, right now there are only guesses.

Curators and workers at the Ohio Historical Society in Columbus, Ohio, remove a leg from the Conway Mastodon in this Jan. 6, 2011, file photo. MARK DUNCAN/ACCUWEATHER

“We don’t know how old the bones are yet; we’ll have to try to radiocarbon date them, but they’re at least over 11,000 years old because mastodons went extinct at the end of the last age,” Redman told the Press. “We won’t be able to know how old that particular skeleton is, because it could be much older than that.”

After analyzing and cataloging the skeleton over the course of the next year, it will be displayed in the museum, alongside all the other mastodon skeletons for which Michigan seems to be a hot spot.

In the past decade, there have been several findings in the state: A mastodon bone here, a mastodon tooth there, even a nearly-complete skeleton. In 2017, construction workers found mastodon bones much the same way, at a housing development south of Grand Rapids. To date, Michigan is home to more than 300 reported discoveries of mastodon remains.

 

In production with AccuWeather

Edited by Alberto Arellano and Joseph Hammond

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