A Partial Bison (Bison cf. B. latifrons) Skeleton from Chuchi Lake, and its Implications for the Middle Wisconsinan Environment of Central British Columbia

Fragmentary but massive left and right horncores, found with eight post-cranial bones, from a clay unit underlying a diamicton of the last (Fraser) glaciation at Chuchi Lake, British Columbia probably represents an individual giant bison (Bison cf. B. latifrons). A sample of bone from one of the hor...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Géographie physique et Quaternaire
Main Authors: Harington, C. Richard, Plouffe, Alain, Jetté, Hélène
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Les Presses de l'Université de Montréal 1996
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Online Access:http://id.erudit.org/iderudit/033076ar
https://doi.org/10.7202/033076ar
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Summary:Fragmentary but massive left and right horncores, found with eight post-cranial bones, from a clay unit underlying a diamicton of the last (Fraser) glaciation at Chuchi Lake, British Columbia probably represents an individual giant bison (Bison cf. B. latifrons). A sample of bone from one of the horncores yielded an accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon date of 30 740 ± 220 BP, whereas overlapping dates from two other laboratories on an associated humerus are 34 800 ± 420 BP and 35 480 ± 1080 BP. Despite the discrepancy between horncore and humerus dates, they are in accord with the suspected stratigraphie age of the clay unit whence they came. Analysis of pollen from that clay unit indicates that bison with massive horns once occupied an open forest in the vicinity. Probably giant bison and Columbian mammoths (incorporating paleoenvironmental evidence found with the nearby, penecontemporaneous Babine Lake mammoth) shared lake-dotted open forest to shrub tundra range in what is now central British Columbia toward the close of the Middle Wisconsinan (Olympia Nonglacial Interval). The Chuchi Lake specimen is important because it is the first indication of giant bison from British Columbia, and it appears to be one of the latest known survivors of this species. On a trouvé au lac Chuchi dans une unité d'argile recouverte d'un diamicton de la dernière glaciation (Fraser), des fragments de noyaux de cornes droite et gauche et des ossements postcrâniens qui pourraient provenir du bison géant (Bison cf. B. latifrons). Un échantillon d'un des noyaux de corne a été daté au radiocarbone par spectrométrie de masse par accélérateur à 30 740 ± 220 BP, alors qu'un humérus du même horizon a été daté dans deux différents laboratoires à 34 800 ± 420 BP et 35 480 ± 1080 BP. Malgré la différence entre les dates du noyau de corne et de l'humérus, celles-ci concordent avec l'âge stratigraphique présumé de l'unité d'argile où les ossements ont été trouvés. L'analyse du pollen de la même unité d'argile indique que le bison ...