Fossil found during New Mexico bachelor
party is 10 million years old
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[June 14, 2014]
By Joseph Kolb
ALBUQUERQUE N.M. (Reuters) - A fossil
mastodon skull found by a group attending a bachelor party at a New
Mexico lakeshore is more than 10 million years old and will take at
least six months to clean, a museum paleontologist said on Friday.
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The partygoers stumbled across the skull this week, complete with
its tusks, buried in sand at Elephant Butte State Park, about 155
miles (250 km) south of Albuquerque.
Gary Morgan, curator and head paleontologist at the New Mexico
Museum of Natural History and Science, led a team that spent some
six hours on Thursday carefully excavating the fossil, which was
buried in about four feet (1.2 meters) of lake silt.
When it emerged, it was found to measure approximately five feet by
three feet (1.5 by 1 meters) and weighed more than 1,000 pounds (450
kg).
"This mastodon find is older than the woolly mammoth that tread the
Earth in the Ice Age. ... It probably died on a sandbar of the
ancient Rio Grande River," Morgan told Reuters.
"I've been here for 20 years and have never seen something like this
before."
Mastodons were relatives of the elephant that stood 10 feet (3
meters) tall and migrated to North America some 15 million years
ago. They ranged across the continent with saber tooth tigers, giant
sloths and American camels before becoming extinct about 10,000
years ago.
Morgan said the unusual discovery came to light after some water was
drained from the Elephant Butte Lake two weeks ago to provide
irrigation for parts of southern New Mexico and Texas.
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He said the meticulous process of cleaning the fossil would now
likely take his team some six months before they could then begin
examining it more closely.
The museum will put the fossil on public display, he said, but
probably not for a year while those studies take place.
"This is too important to keep stored in the back," he said.
(Reporting by Joseph Kolb; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Will Dunham)
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