An American farmer who
excavated a mammoth skeleton from his land last week decided to donate the find
to the University of Michigan. The mammoth’s bones could be up to 15,000 years
old. The discovery was made during routine digging for drainage.
The
mammoth’s remains were discovered as Jim Bristle was installing a drainage pipe
at his Chelsea-area soybean farm in Michigan last Thursday.
Daniel
Fisher leads the dig near Chelsea, Michigan. Image: Daryl Marshke, Michigan
Photography
|
At
the beginning, giant ribs were dug up. After realizing the scale of the find,
Bristle called the University of Michigan and Dan Fisher, a professor of
paleontology and director of the University’s Museum of Paleontology.
RT America report continues:
RT America report continues:
Fisher
arrived along with his team to complete the excavation, which found rib bones,
vertebrae, tusks, pelvic bones, and a mostly-intact skull. The professor called
the discovery one of the top ten most significant finds in Michigan history and
said the mammoth would be named the Bristle Mammoth, after the farmer.
The mammoth
skull and tusks is removed from the excavation site. Image: Daryl Marshke,
Michigan Photography
|
University
researchers have concluded that the mammoth is a hybrid between a woolly
mammoth and a Columbian mammoth. The bones could be anywhere between 11,700 and
15,000 years old.
Being
so large, Bristle was not sure what to do with the skeleton and so he decided
to donate it to the university where it can be looked at by all. “I’d like it
to go to a place where more people can see it and we can learn more about
history from it,” he told MLive. “Really it’s just the right thing to do.”
“Well, the wife said we’re not hanging it over
the mantle,” he added. “And I don’t think there’s a buck pole big enough for
it.”
Fisher
was ecstatic with the idea, adding that he hopes to display it at the
university's Museum of Natural History. The whole skeleton is still at the farm
and the professor’s team began cleaning the bones on Monday.
News
of the find travelled fast, however, and so far over 200 people from the
vicinity have come to see it. Bristle said that the work at the farm has been
put on hold because of the influx of visitors.
“We’ve
had people drive out from Battle Creek and Jackson. They drive into Chelsea and
stop somewhere to ask where the farm is and then just come on out,” he said. “We’ve
had teachers and kids with their parents and grandparents. Just earlier today
we had a man who was in hospice care come out to see the bones. The reaction
has just been amazing.”
Trent
Satterthwaite, who was with Bristle at the time of the discovery, said that
they have been “told this could change our understanding of history in this
area … When they date this we could know there were humans here between 10,000
and 15,000 years ago. This could change the history books.”
Fisher believes that the
mammoth could have been killed by early hunters due to the specific placement
of the bones. There was also a possible cutting tool discovered near the bones.
Researchers theorize that early humans killed the mammoth and tried to preserve
it for food.
- SOURCES: RT AMERICA/MOTHERBOARD
- SOURCES: RT AMERICA/MOTHERBOARD
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