CGRG Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology
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Author : Harington, C.R.; Grant, D.R.; and Mott, R.J.
Date : 1993
Title : The Hillsborough, New Brunswick. mastodon and comments on other mastodon fossils from Nova Scotia
Publication : Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
Issue : 30(6):
Page(s) : 1242-1253
Abstract
This is the first detailed description of the remains of a young adult American mastodon (Mammut americanum) found in 1936 in peaty silt and clay underlying till in gypsum karstnear Hillsborough, New Brunswick. It documents 312 fossils comprising a partial skull with molar teeth and tusks, a neck vertebra, and much of the right postcranial skeleton. Anindividual age of 15-18 years and a weight of 8.3 t are estimated for this mastodon. Associated spheroids, containing cut wood fragments and an unusually high clay content,are interpreted to be mastodon coprolites. Radiocarbon ages are 13600 +/- 200 (bone), 37200 +/- 1310 (coprolite wood), 51500 +/- 1270 (coprolite carbonate cement), and > 43000 BP(peat). Pollen in the coprolites and associated sediment indicates a coniferous forest. Nine other mastodon fossils from Nova Scotia include a femur from Middle River, which dates 31300 +/- 500 BP and contains pollen representing boreal forest - tundra, and three molars from offshore Georges Bank. All ages are judged minimal: the older four are at or near the limit ofthe method; the younger is likely incorrect because of preservative contamination. Associated pollen assemblages correlate with late last interglacial age deposits in the regionand differ from possible Middle Wisconsinan age deposits. The fossils are regarded as a single group and are assigned to a cool phase of the Sangamonian interglaciation, probablyoxygen-isotope substage 5a, prior to Wisconsinan glaciation.
Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology