A look at the Nov. 9, 2014 mastodon dig. It's likely that some or all of the mastodon bones were washed into the excavation site from upland drainage thousands of years ago. (Photo by Don Comis) |
You can see how cold it was on Nov. 9 by the winter clothing worn by volunteers. (Photo by Don Comis) |
As the search for mastodon bones on a soybean farm in
Morrow County, Ohio, winds down before winter, the work shifts to a lab at
Ashland University where the excavated materials will be analyzed to decide if
it’s worth continuing the excavation in the spring.
Excavation leader, Dr. Nigel Brush-- Ashland
University associate professor of geology--wrote in an e-mail answer to my
questions, that the lab tests “will provide the final answer” as to whether the
mastodon was killed and butchered by Paleo-Indians, as it appears.
Right Site?
Even if the answer is “yes”, the next question is whether
the excavation site is the butchery site.
Brush wrote that, “Based on the geological work that is being done at
the site, it is appearing more and more likely that the bones were brought to
their present location by a debris flow from a site at a higher elevation. “ He added that an upland kill and butchery
site doesn’t make as much sense as the current excavation site, which is right
near the remnants of an ancient bog where the animal could have been trapped in
the soft sediment by its weight.
The bog traces back to the Pleistocene era when it was a
muddy glacial lake.
Students from Ohio’s Wooster College’s Climate Change class sank a probe more than 20 feet into the mud, gaining a record of environmental change over about the past 15,000 years. Brush said, “They also found possible evidence for an old preglacial stream channel running through the bog."
Students from Ohio’s Wooster College’s Climate Change class sank a probe more than 20 feet into the mud, gaining a record of environmental change over about the past 15,000 years. Brush said, “They also found possible evidence for an old preglacial stream channel running through the bog."
Discovering the Ice Age
Students from Brush’ 'Discovering the Ice Age” class are also among
the volunteers on the dig.
Since the skeleton parts found so far are very crushed
and shattered, the focus of the excavation shifted after the first month, from
recovering a complete skeleton for exhibit, to finding evidence of
Paleo-Indians killing and butchering a mastodon.
Brush’s e-mail to me continued, “We have ample evidence
from Ohio and surrounding states that Paleoindians were present during this
time period. Butchery sites are not as
common, although their number is steadily growing (due to the work of Dan Fisher
at the University of Michigan, and other archaeologists).
Paleo-Indian (also written as "Paleoindian") is the term for the first people to arrive in North America, about 16,000 years
ago, near the end of the Ice Age. The website www.Indians.org says that, “Their
name, Paleo, actually comes from the Greek word “palaios,” meaning ancient.”
Tools, such as
flint scrapers, used to possibly butcher the mastodon are being sent to another
lab for DNA analysis to test for mastodon blood. At the Ashland lab, bones and other materials are being power washed
with water and examined for cut marks made by butchering tools.
Scavengers
Brush wrote, “There are a lot of gnaw and bite marks on
the bone”, suggesting the possibility that the mastodon merely died of old age,
its corpse eaten by scavenging animals.
But, it’s also possible that the scavengers were just mopping up what
was left after the Paleo-Indians butchered it.
On Nov. 9, volunteers found another possible hammerstone,
a large round stone used to as a hammer or maul to crush things. Amateur “surface hunters” identify hammerstones
by the pecks or pockmarks caused as the stones are pounded on things. The latest hammerstone was found in the same
plot where at least one other hammerstone was found.
Volunteers also found possible vertebrae on Nov. 9.
We also found more pieces of flint and fragments of bones,
including small pieces of tusk.
Other items found since the dig began include possible
leg bones, ankle bones, rib bones, jaw bones, wrist bones, and all four lower
teeth of the mastodon. And we found
pieces of flint brought to the area by man from other parts of Ohio as well as
pieces of charcoal that could have come from fires used to cook parts of the
mastodon. A possible fire pit was also
found.
As far as I know, the only proven weapon found was a tiny
projectile point (a “Merom Expanding Stemmed
point “)—a Stone Age spear or arrow head—that belonged to Native Americans who
arrived long after the mastodon was extinct.
While the mastodon dates back to beyond 8,000 B.C., the projectile
“only” dates to between 1,600 B.C. to 810 B.C.
Mastodon On Its Last Legs
An analysis of the mastodon’s lower four teeth by volunteer Scott Donaldson showed that the mastodon had lived to a ripe old age
that likely made it more vulnerable to predation by man or beast, as explained
in my previous blog. Donaldson led the work
on restoring and preserving the teeth and served as one of the crew chiefs
during the excavation.
In the fall of 2013, a soybean farmer found two of the
teeth, two feet apart, after they were unearthed when a ditch was dug to lay
drainage pipe. This triggered the
excavation which began Aug. 23, 2014.
The Nov. 9 dig was planned as the last dig before winter,
but Brush later said that, weather permitting, he would schedule one more dig,
after the weekend of Nov. 15-16.
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