Sewer Project Unearths Trove Of Mastodon Bones

(SEYMOUR) – Workers installing sewer lines across a southern Indiana farm unearthed the fossilized bones of a mastodon that likely stood about 9 feet (2.7 meters) tall.


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Joe Schepman, left, and his son, Brad, hold the tusk of a mastodon found on the family’s property. on April 15, 2019, in Seymour. Atlas Excavating recently discovered the remains of a mastodon on property owned by Schepman. The remains include the majority of a tusk, part of a jawbone with teeth, two upper leg bones, vertebrae, a joint and part of the skull. The tusk was split into two pieces and together made up about a third of the tusk. (Jordan Richart/The Tribune via AP)
The bones include most of a tusk, parts of a skull and a jawbone with teeth. They were recently dug up on a farm in Seymour, about 60 miles (96 kilometers) south of Indianapolis.
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Photo by Jordan Richart/The Tribune via AP
Joe Schepman owns the farm with his family. He tells The Seymour Tribune that “it’s amazing to think about something this large roaming around this area.”
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Photo by Jordan Richart/The Tribune via AP
Ron Richards is senior research curator of paleobiology at the Indiana State Museum. He says the mastodon would have stood between 9 (2.7 meters) and 9½ feet (2.8 meters) tall.
Richards says the fossil’s age will be determined using radiocarbon dating.
Information from: The (Seymour) Tribune, http://www.tribtown.com

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