Snake Creek Burial Cave and a review of the Quaternary mustelids of the Great Basin

Snake Creek Burial Cave (SCBC), east central Nevada, is a unique paleontological deposit. The cave is the first natural trap excavated in the Great Basin and one of the few localities describing a valley-bottom community. The recovery of extinct Camelops sp. (camel) and Equus spp. (horse), in additi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mead, Emilee M., Mead, Jim I.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 1989
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/gbn/vol49/iss2/1
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/context/gbn/article/3029/viewcontent/27249.pdf
Description
Summary:Snake Creek Burial Cave (SCBC), east central Nevada, is a unique paleontological deposit. The cave is the first natural trap excavated in the Great Basin and one of the few localities describing a valley-bottom community. The recovery of extinct Camelops sp. (camel) and Equus spp. (horse), in addition to radiometric dates, indicates at least some of the deposits to be of late Pleistocene age. Eight mustelid species have been identified from SCBC, including three species not previously reported from the late Rancholabrean of the Great Basin: Mustela nigripes (black-footed ferret), M. nivalis (least weasel), and Gulo gulo (wolverine). A review of late Pleistocene deposits indicates that there are more species of mustelids recovered from Snake Creek Burial Cave than from any other locality in the Great Basin.