Fossil
Dung
Source: Mead, Jim I., "Quaternary
of the Colorado Plateau," a book chapter in press, and other material
from the literature.
Fossil dung deposits (a.k.a. coprolites,
or boluses) are usually rare in the Southwest, but by far the largest
and most numerous deposits have come from
Pleistocene mammals that once lived on the Colorado Plateau. Most
of the localities have been discovered and studied only since 1983. Besides
revealing information about the diet of ancient species, these remains
also provide high-quality organic residues for
radiocarbon dating. Further biochemical analysis of fossil dung deposits
is expected to yield a wealth of dietary, climatic, and extinction data.
Analysis of dung deposited by
extinct or extirpated megafauna in the Southwest began with Lull's
(1930) description of Nothrotheriops shastensis (Shasta ground
sloth) boluses found in Rampart Cave in
Grand Canyon in Arizona. Not until detailed examination of the dung
deposits for clues to megafaunal extinction by Martin et al. (1961) did
the analysis of fossil dung become an integral past of paleoecological
reconstructions on the Colorado Plateau. Analysis of coprolites for dietary
contents was perfected by Hansen (1978; 1980).
One of the world's most remarkable deposits of large boluses were the
over 300 square meters of mammoth dung found in Bechan
Cave in southern Utah. These boluses contained well-preserved plant macrofossils.
As much as 95% of its composition consisted of grass remains, which proved
that mammoths on the Colorado Plateau, like the modern elephants of the
old world, ate large quantities of grass. Remains of saltbush, sagebrush,
birch, blue spruce and other woody plants made up the rest of the fossil
dung.
At least 20 localities from the Colorado Plateau are known to contain
desiccated dung of extinct and extirpated megaherbivores. Mead and Agenbroad
(1992) provide a recent in-depth review of radiocarbon dates and dietary
analyses conducted on late Quaternary extinct and extant megaherbivores
of the Plateau, including a locality by locality review of available data.
Of the seven species of megaherbivore identified using dung, four became
extinct sometime between 11,800 and 11,000 yr B.P.: Harrington's mountain
goat, shrub ox, mammoth, and Shasta ground sloth.
Resources:
Davis, O. K., L. D. Agenbroad, P. S. Martin, and J. I. Mead. 1984. The
Pleistocene dung blanket of Bechan Cave, Utah. Carnegie Museum of Natural
History Special Publication: 267-282.
Hansen, R. M. 1978. Shasta ground sloth food habits, Rampart Cave, Arizona.
Paleobiology 4: 302-319.
Hansen, R. M. 1980. Late Pleistocene plant fragments in the dungs of
herbivores at Cowboy Cave. Pp. 179-189 In: J. D. Jennings, editor.
Cowboy Cave. Anthropological Papers, vol. 104, University
of Utah, Provo, UT.
Lull, R. S. 1930. The ground sloth, Nothertherium. American
Journal of Science 22: 344-352.
Martin, P. S., B. E. Sabels, and D. Shutler. 1961. Rampart Cave coprolites
and the ecology of the Shasta Ground Sloth. American Journal of Science
259: 102-127.
Mead, J. I., L. D. Agenbroad, O. K. Davis, and P. S. Martin. 1986. Dung
of Mammuthus in the arid southwest, North America. Quaternary
Research 25: 121-127.
Mead, J. I., M. K. O'Rourke, and T. M. Foppe. 1986. Dung and diet of
the extinct Harrington's mountain goat (Oreamnos harrintoni). Journal
of Mammology 67: 284-293.
Mead, J., I., and L. D. Agenbroad. 1992. Isotope dating of Pleistocene
dung deposits from the Colorado Plateau. Radiocarbon 34:
1-19.
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