124 W. Main, P.O. Box 550, Crosbyton, TX
79322
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The
Dickens Mammoth Dig Devastated by Earthquake.
What appeared to be a complete
mammoth skull upside down with tusks in the sockets, turned out to be a
complete surprise. The Red Mud fault runs from Spur, Texas south of
here to Amarillo, Texas and apparently went right through this mammoth.
To out dismay, the bones of this huge bull were mangled and shattered.
The one tusk we recovered was bent and torn into three pieces and left
along the side of the skull...what was left of it that is.
June 20 to 24th the Mt. Blanco
team excavated what was left of a large bull mammoth in the J2 Canyon
south of Dickens, Texas. It was found several years ago by Mr. Charlie
Gibson on the Mitchell Baldwin ranch, when Charlie and an Indian friend
were building a fence. If you could see how rough this canyon is, you
would be amazed that anyone could build a fence across it! The draws
are steep and dangerous. It is quite a task just to search the layers
of gravel for other fossils.
Stan Lutz of Washington state
excavated what was left of the back of the skull which consisted of
parts of its occipital condyles that join the atlas first vertebra. He
did find several root tips of the teeth of the lower jaw.
The two upper molars were badly eroded, but still in the sockets. But
that is all. I have seen mammoth skulls from Alaska that are still just
bone that have been shattered leaving nothing but the teeth in the
sockets and nothing of the rest of the skull.
We removed a heavy jacket from
the front of the skull which contained jumbled fragments of bone. We
won't know what the bone is till we open it in the lab.
Of real interest were the
small clam shells about 3/8 of an inch long. There were also small land
snails the same size and a turitella about 1 half inch. These were
throughout the layers containing the bones. Also found with it were
large fresh water clams up to two inches long. I have found these with
other mammoths in this area of West Texas. Many of them are closed,
indicating sudden death.
New bones
found. Mt. Blanco's main digging partner, veteran fossil lover Don
Yaeger's grandson Nate Horne found a perfect foot bone of a giant bison
about 20 feet east of the mammoth.
When I came to see this site
earlier this year, I found a partial sacrum of a giant bison, probably
an antiquus. Nate's bone was of a different color, so it may have been
a different animal. I also found the tooth of a camel right next to the
skull, but no other camel bones turned up.
Salt dome collapses. In the
local cafe in Dickens, a local man, Mr. Gordan Latham, told us of
a large mammoth they found on the south edge of town in the 60s and
that he had experienced earthquakes locally, but attributed some of
them to large salt domes collapsing under the area.
The main piece of tusk was
about 6 feet long and probably upwards of 12 to 14 feet before it was
shattered. We plastered it out and returned the next day to plaster the
other side and add wood stabilizers and let it dry out. This
week, June 28th. 05, we'll go to haul it up the steep sandy 20
foot embankment.
Regardless of the lack of
valuable bones, all digs reveal the secrets of the earth and
its fascinating history. Stay tuned for more.