An
Ancient World
About the time that
the finishing touches were being put on Wind Cave, visitors to the
place we call Wind Cave National Park would have seen a completely
different world. The geological time period was Oligocene, which
extended from about 34 million years ago until 23 million years
ago. The Great Plains were just beginning to develop. Dense deciduous
forests were becoming open wooded grasslands. The climate was subtropical
and gradually became cooler and drier over a long period, transforming
the vegetation of the Earth to something far more like that of today.
These changing environments had a dramatic effect on the lives of
mammals around the world.
The Land
Changes
Mammals, which blossomed
with the disappearance of the dinosaurs, were expanding both in range
and in variety as land bridges between the continents allowed them
to invade new territory. Here in South Dakota, the Great Plains was
a rich environment where many animals, ones we would identify as quite
unusual, lived their lives.
What Is This?
While the remains
of these unusual animals are common on the Great Plains, recently,
scientists uncovered a fossil record of their remains in the Black
Hills. The fossil that first caught the attention of scientists
was a set of very large teeth. Careful study of the area revealed
that these were the teeth of an ancient rhinoceros - a Subhyrocodon
occidentalis. This animal is about the same size as a modern
yearling bison, but its teeth are distinctively different.
Scientist
Investigate
The paleontologists
quickly became interested in what other fossils the site might hold.
To date, a primitive deer, a tortoise, a three-toed horse, and the
rhinoceros have been identified. The deposit in which these fossils
lie is the White River Group. The fossils were uncovered by the erosional
affects of wind and rain that slowly removed the clay. As the clay
became wet and dry, it expanded and contacted causing the fossils to
become extremely fractured and fragile.
Protecting
the Find
Because the fossils
are extremely fractured, the scientists examining the area have to
jacket the items they find so they will not fall apart upon inspection.
To jacket something means that burlap dipped in plaster wrapped around
the fossil. After the fossil is taken to the lab where it will be studied,
the cast can be removed. Without the jacket, the fossil will break
into many pieces and putting them back together again would be like
putting together the world’s most difficult jigsaw puzzle.
How to See
the Fossils
The rhinoceros and
other fossils are currently stored at the Mammoth
Site in Hot Springs. Some preliminary cleaning and repair of the
specimens is being done there. While it only took a week to remove
the fossils from the ground, it will take months to remove the surrounding
rock, stabilize the bone and completely prepare the fossils. The process
will be slow because of the fractured and fragile nature of the bones
and teeth.
Visitors can view
the fossils and watch the work being done to protect them at the
Mammoth Site. The Mammoth Site staff has years of experience examining
the earth’s records of more recent mammals such as the mammoths,
the short faced bear, and the recently discovered American lion.
The bones at the Mammoth Site are not like the White River Group
fossils found at Wind Cave National Park. However, they are still
fossils and their treatment is much the same. The bones at the Mammoth
Site are about 26,000 years old where the fossils found in the park
are about 30 million years old.
More Fossil
Sites
The erosion of the
Rocky Mountains and Black Hills and volcanic eruptions from further
west were responsible for the deposition of the fossil-rich White River
clays, silts, and sands that form the White River Group found over
large areas of South Dakota, Nebraska, Colorado, and Wyoming. Many
of our national parks rich in fossil evidence are from the Oligocene
Epoch. For more information about fossils or the Oligocene Epoch, visit
the Badlands and Big
Bend National Parks, John
Day Fossil Beds National Monuments, and now, Wind Cave National
Park. These and other National Park Service sites can be accessed via
the internet at www.nps.gov. Information
about the Mammoth
Site can be found at www.mammothsite.com.
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Dr. Greg McDonald examines rhino teeth

Subhyrocodon skull

Dr. Greg McDonald examining rhino jacket

Catherine
Burgess, Mammoth Site Intern, working in lab piecing together teeth.
Mammoth Site photo
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