|
Post by Melanie on Apr 7, 2006 15:24:56 GMT
The extinct Harrington's mountain goat (Oreamnos harringtoni) is predominantly known from dry cave localities in the Grand Canyon, Arizona, in addition to two sites in the Great Basin, Nevada, and from San Josecito Cave, Nuevo Leon, Mexico. A dry shelter in Natural Bridges National Monument, on the central Colorado Plateau, southeastern Utah, preserves numerous remains of the extinct mountain goat in addition to pack rat middens. Remains from a 100-cm stratigraphic profile indicate that O. harringtoni lived on the plateau >39,800 yr B.P., the oldest directly dated find of extinct mountain goat. Plant microfossils indicate that Engelmann's spruce (Picea engelmannii), limber pine (Pinus flexilis), rose (Rosa cf. woodsii), and Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) grew during the late Pleistocene where a riparian and a pinyon-juniper (Pinus edulis - Juniperus osteosperma) community now predominates; Douglas fir are found only in mesic, protected, north-facing areas. Limber pine, Douglas fir, bark, and grasses were the major dietary components in the dung. A springtime diet of birch (Betula) is determined from pollen clumps in dung pellets.
|
|
|
Post by Bowhead Whale on Apr 20, 2006 18:51:26 GMT
What was the shape of its horns?
|
|
|
Post by Melanie on Apr 20, 2006 20:04:13 GMT
|
|
|
Post by surroundx on Apr 19, 2017 9:38:49 GMT
|
|
|
Post by surroundx on Apr 25, 2018 5:43:19 GMT
Campos, Paula F. et al. (2010). Molecular identification of the extinct mountain goat, Oreamnos harringtoni (Bovidae). Boreas 39(1): 18-23. [ Abstract]
|
|