Skip to main content

Paleobiology and Extinction of Proboscideans in the Great Lakes Region of North America

  • Chapter

Part of the book series: Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology ((VERT))

I would like to address the topic of this chapter in calm reflection on a mature body of data, representing a balanced sampling of the empirical record and unhurried evaluation of its possible interpretations. I would also like to be 5 – no, 10 – years further along in the very labor-intensive process of compiling that empirical record! For now, however, I will have to settle for a status report on a series of ongoing investigations designed to assess the nature of late Pleistocene proboscidean occurrences and evaluate aspects of proboscidean paleobiology that have the potential to yield insights concerning the ecological stresses encountered by these animals during the centuries and millennia leading up to the time of their ultimate extinction.

This book focuses on the broad problem of late Pleistocene losses of megafaunal taxa across the Americas, which is itself a geographically, taxonomically, and temporally restricted subset of the larger problem of worldwide losses of megafaunal diversity. In contrast, my title carves out an even smaller region (and set of taxa) as the domain for my analysis. Work in progress actually involves proboscideans from more diverse regions of the Americas and from Siberia as well, and it has involved a variety of aspects of proboscidean paleobiology, but only for the Great Lakes region of North America are there enough data in hand at this time to warrant a summary of trends that offer evidence of the cause of extinction.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution.

Buying options

Chapter
USD   29.95
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
eBook
USD   89.00
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
Softcover Book
USD   119.00
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info
Hardcover Book
USD   119.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Durable hardcover edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Purchases are for personal use only

Learn about institutional subscriptions

Preview

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

References

  • Alroy J (2001) A multispecies overkill simulation of the end-Pleistocene megafaunal mass extinction. Science 292:1893–1896

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Ambrose SH, Norr L (1993) Experimental evidence for the relationship of the carbon isotope ratios of whole diet and dietary protein to those of bone collagen and carbonate. In: Lambert JB, Groupe G (eds) Prehistoric human bone: Archaeology at the molecular level. Springer, Berlin, pp 1–37

    Chapter  Google Scholar 

  • Barnosky AD, Koch PL, Feranec RS, Wing SL, Shabel AB (2004) Assessing the causes of late Pleistocene extinctions on the continents. Science 306:70–75

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Brunswig RH (2007) New interpretations of the Dent mammoth site. In: Brunswig RH, Pitblado BL (eds) Frontiers in Colorado Paleoindian archaeology: From the Dent site to the Rocky Mountains. University Press of Colorado, Boulder, CO, pp 87–121

    Google Scholar 

  • Buss IO (1990) Elephant life: Fifteen years of high population density. Iowa State University Press, Ames

    Google Scholar 

  • Carrick R, Ingham SE (1962) Studies on the southern elephant seal, Mirounga leonina (L.). I. Introduction to the series. Commonwealth Scientifi c and Industrial Research Organization Wildlife Research 7, 89–101

    Google Scholar 

  • Cerling TE, Harris JH (1999) Carbon isotope fractionation between diet and bioapatite in ungulate mammals and implications for ecological and paleoecological studies. Oecologia 120:347–363

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Clutton-Brock TH, Guiness FE, Albon SD (1982) Red Deer: Behavior and ecology of two sexes. University of Chicago Press, Chicago

    Google Scholar 

  • Coope GR, Lister AM (1987) Late-glacial mammoth skeletons from Condover, Shropshire, England. Nature 330:472–474

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Dean MC, Scandrett AE (1996) The relation between long-period incremental markings in dentine and daily cross-striations in enamel in human teeth. Arch Oral Biol 41:233–241

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • DeNiro MJ, Epstein S (1981) Infl uence of diet on the distribution of nitrogen isotopes in animals. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 45:341–351

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Deraniyagala PEP (1955) Some extinct elephants, their relatives, and the two living species. National Museum of Ceylon, Colombo

    Google Scholar 

  • Douglas-Hamilton I (1973) On the ecology and behavior of the Lake Manyara elephants. East Afr Wildlife J 11:401–403

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Elder WH (1970) Morphometry of elephant tusks. Zoologica Afri-cana 5:143–159

    Google Scholar 

  • Espinoza EO, Mann MJ (1993) The history and signifi cance of the Schreger pattern in proboscidean ivory characterization. J Am Institute Conserv 32:241–248

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Firestone RB, West A, Kennett JP, Becker L, Bunch TE, Revay ZS, Schultz PH, Belgya T, Kennett DJ, Erlandson JM, Dickenson OJ, Goodyear AC, Harris RS, Howard GA, Kloosterman JB, Lechler P, Mayewski PA, Montgomery J, Poreda R, Darrah T, Que Hee SS, Smith AR, Stich A, Topping W, Wittke JH, Wolbach WS (2007) Evidence for an extraterrestrial impact 12,900 years ago that contributed to the megafaunal extinctions and the Younger Dryas cooling. Proc Natl Acad Sci 104:16016–16021

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (1984a) Mastodon butchery by North American Paleo-Indians. Nature 308:271–272

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (1984b) Taphonomic analysis of late Pleistocene mastodon occurrences: Evidence of butchery by North American Paleo-Indians. Paleobiology 10:338–357

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (1987) Mastodont procurement by Paleoindians of the Great Lakes Region: Hunting or scavenging? In: Nitecki MH, Nitecki DV (eds) The evolution of human hunting. Plenum, New York, pp 309–421

    Chapter  Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (1988) Season of death of the Hiscock mastodonts. In: Laub RS, Miller NG, Steadman DW (eds) Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene paleoecology and archeology of the Eastern Great Lakes Region. Bull Buffalo Soci Natural Sci 33:115–125

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (1994) Late Pleistocene mastodon trackways in pond-margin sediments in southeastern Michigan. J Vert Paleontol 14(Suppl to 3):25A

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (1995) Experiments on subaqueous meat caching. Curr Res Pleistocene 12:77–80

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (1996a) Extinction of proboscideans in North America. In: Shoshani J, Tassy P (eds) The Proboscidea: Evolution and palaeoecology of elephants and their relatives. Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp 296–315

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (1996b) Testing late Pleistocene extinction mechanisms with data on mastodon and mammoth life history. J Vert Paleontol 16 (Suppl to 3):34A

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (2001a) Season of death, growth rates, and life history of North American mammoths. In: West DL (ed) Mammoth site studies: Proceedings of the fi rst international conference on mammoth site studies. Publications in Anthropology, University of Kansas, Lawrence 22, 121–135

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (2001b) Entrained vs. free-running physiological rhythms and incremental features in the tusks of woolly mammoths. J Vert Paleontol 21(Suppl to 3):49A–50A

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (2004a) Mastodons, mammoths, and humans in the North American midcontinent. In: Lepper BT, Bonnichsen R (eds) New perspectives on the fi rst Americans. Center for the Study of the First Americans, College Station, TX, pp 81–86

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (2004b) Season of musth and musth-related mortality in Pleistocene mammoths. J Vert Paleontol 24(Suppl to 3):58A

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (2005) Osteology, taphonomy, and life history of two late Pleistocene American mastodons (Mammut americanum). In: Agenbroad LD, Symington RL (eds) 2nd World of elephants congress: Short papers and abstracts. Mammoth Site of Hot Springs, South Dakota, pp 44–46

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (2007) Life history analysis of the Yukagir mammoth. In: Boeskorov GG, Tikhonov AN, Suzuki N (eds) The Yukagir mammoth. Institute of Applied Ecology of the North [Yakutsk], St. Petersburg, pp 142–156

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC (2008). Taphonomy and paleobiology of the Hyde Park mastodon. In: Allmon WD, Nester PL (eds) Mastodon paleobiol-ogy, taphonomy, and paleoenvironment in the late Pleistocene of New York State: Studies on the Hyde Park, Chemung, and Java sites. Palaeontographica Americana 61:197–289

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC n.d. (1997) Recovery and analysis of the St. Johns mastodon, Clinton County, Michigan. Bureau of Transportation Planning, Environmental Section, Michigan Department of Transportation, 91 pp

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC, Beld SG, Rountrey AN (2008) Tusk record of the North Java mastodon. In: Allmon WD, Nester PL (eds) Mastodon paleo-biology, taphonomy, and paleoenvironment in the late Pleistocene of New York State: Studies on the Hyde Park, Chemung, and Java sites. Palaeontographica Americana 61:417–463

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC, Fox DL (2003) Season of death and terminal growth histories of Hiscock mastodons. In: Laub RS (ed) The Hiscock Site: late Pleistocene and Holocene paleoecology and archaeology of western New York state. Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural History 37, 83–101

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC, Fox DL (2005) Calving histories of female mastodons (Mammut americanum). J Vert Paleontol 25 (Suppl to 3):57A

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC, Fox DL (2006) Five years in the life of an Aucilla River mastodon. In: Webb SD (ed), The First Floridians. Springer, Dordrecht, pp 343–377

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC, Fox DL (2007a) Season of death of the Dent mammoths: Distinguishing single from multiple mortality events. In: Brunswig RH, Pitblado BL (eds) Frontiers in Colorado Paleoindian archaeology: From the Dent site to the Rocky Mountains. University Press of Colorado, Boulder, CO, pp 123–153

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC, Fox DL (2007b) Life history and unilateral loss of molar function in the Cohoes mastodon: A case study in nutritional stress? J Vert Paleontol 27 (Suppl to 3), 74A–75A

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC, Fox DL, Agenbroad LD (2003) Tusk growth rate and season of death of Mammuthus columbi from Hot Springs, South Dakota, USA. In: Reumer JWF, De Vos J, Mol D (eds) Advances in mammoth research (Proceedings of the Second International Mammoth Conference, Rotterdam, May 16–20 1999). Deinsea 9:117–133

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC, Lepper BT, Hooge PE (1994) Evidence for butchery of the Burning Tree mastodon. In: Dancy WS (ed) The fi rst discovery of America: Archaeological evidence of the early inhabitants of the Ohio area. Ohio Archaeological Council, Columbus, pp 43–57

    Google Scholar 

  • Fisher DC, Rountrey AN, Beld SG, Fox DL, Gohman S, Tikhonov AN, Mol D, Buigues B, Boeskorov G, Lazarev P (2007) Life history of the Yukagir mammoth. Abstracts, International Mammoth Conference IV:129–130

    Google Scholar 

  • Foote M, Miller AI (2007) Principles of Paleontology. Third Edition. WH Freeman, New York

    Google Scholar 

  • Fox DL, Fisher DC, Vartanyan S, Tikhonov AN, Mol D, Buigues B (2007) Paleoclimatic implications of oxygen isotopic variation in late Pleistocene and Holocene tusks of Mammuthus primigenius from northern Eurasia. Quat Intl 169–170:154–165

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Frison GC, Todd LC (1986) The Colby mammoth site: Taphonomy and archaeology of a Clovis kill in northern Wyoming. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque

    Google Scholar 

  • Garland EB, Cogswell JW (1985) The Powers mastodon site. Michigan Archaeolo 31:3–39

    Google Scholar 

  • Gat JR (1980) The isotopes of hydrogen and oxygen in precipitation. In: Fritz P, Fontes JC (eds) Handbook of environmental isotope geochemistry, 1, The terrestrial environment. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp 21–47

    Google Scholar 

  • Gohman S, Fox DL, Fisher DC, Vartanyan S, Tikhonov AN (2007) Paleodietary and environmental implications of carbon and nitrogen isotopic variation in late Pleistocene and Holocene tusks of Mammuthus primigenius from northern Eurasia. J Vert Paleontol 27 (Suppl to 3):82A

    Google Scholar 

  • Gohman SCL, Fox DL, Fisher DC, Vartanyan SL, Tikhonov AN, Mol D, Buigues B (Submitted) Paleodietary and paleoenvironmen-tal implications of carbon and nitrogen isotopic variations in late Pleistocene and Holocene tusks of Mammuthus primigenius from northern Eurasia. In: Boeskorov GG, Lazarev PA (eds) Proceedings of the 4th International Mammoth Conference, Yakutsk. 8 ms. pp., 4 fi gures

    Google Scholar 

  • Haynes G (1990) The mountains that fell down: Life and death of heartland mammoths. In: Agenbroad LD, Mead JI, Nelson LW (eds) Meg-afauna and man: Discovery of America's heartland. The Mammoth Site of Hot Springs, South Dakota, Hot Springs, pp 22–31

    Google Scholar 

  • Haynes G (1991) Mammoths, mastodonts, and elephants: Biology, behavior, and the fossil record. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge

    Google Scholar 

  • Haynes G (2002) The early settlement of North America: The Clovis era. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge

    Google Scholar 

  • Heaton THE, Vogel JC, von la Chevallerie G, Collett G (1986) Climatic infl uence on the isotopic composition of bone nitrogen. Nature 322:822–823

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hobson KA, Alisauskas RT, Clark RG (1993) Stable-nitrogen isotope enrichment in avian tissues due to fasting and nutritional stress: Implications for isotopic analyses of diet. Condor 95:388–394

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hollister-Smith JA, Poole JH, Archie EA, Vance EA, Georgiadis NJ, Moss CJ, Alberts SC (2007) Age, musth and paternity success in wild male African elephants, Loxodonta africana. Animal Behaviour 74(2):287–296

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hoppe KA (2004) Late Pleistocene mammoth herd structure, migration patterns, and Clovis hunting strategies inferred from isotopic analyses of multiple death assemblages. Paleobiology 30:129–145

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hoyle BG, Fisher DC, Borns HW, Jr, Churchill-Dickson LL, Dorion CC, Weddle TK (2004) Late Pleistocene mammoth remains from coastal Maine, USA. Quat Res 61, 277–288

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Kapp RO, Cleary DL, Snyder GG, Fisher DC (1990) Vegetational and climatic history of the Crystal Lake area and the Eldridge mastodont site, Montcalm County, Michigan. Am Midland Natural 123:47–63

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • King JE, Saunders JJ (1984) Environmental insularity and the extinction of the American mastodont. In: Martin PS, Klein RG (eds) Quaternary extinctions: A prehistoric revolution. University of Arizona Press, Tucson, pp 315–339

    Google Scholar 

  • Klevezal GA (1996) Recording structures of mammals: Determination of age and reconstruction of life history. Revised and updated edition (Mina M V, Oreshkin AV, trans.). A.A. Balkema, Rotterdam

    Google Scholar 

  • Koch PL (1989) Paleobiology of late Pleistocene mastodonts and mammoths from southern Michigan and western New York. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Michigan

    Google Scholar 

  • Koch PL (1998) Isotopic reconstruction of past continental environments. Ann Rev Earth Planet Sci 26:573–613

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Koch PL, Fisher DC, Dettman D (1989) Oxygen isotope variation in the tusks of extinct proboscideans: A measure of season of death and seasonality. Geology 17:515–519

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Koch PL, Fogel ML, Tuross M (1994) Tracing the diets of fossil animals using stable isotopes. In: Lajtha K, Michener RH (eds) Stable isotopes in ecology and environmental science. Blackwell, Oxford, pp 63–92

    Google Scholar 

  • Kohn M (1996) Predicting animal δ18O: Accounting for diet and physiological adaptation. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 60:4811–4829

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Laws RM (1966) Age criteria for the African elephant, Loxodonta a. africana. East African Wildlife J 4:1–37

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Laws RM, Parker ISC, Johnstone RCB (1975) Elephants and their habitats: The ecology of elephants in North Bunyoro, Uganda. Clarendon Press, Oxford

    Google Scholar 

  • Lee PC, Moss CJ (1985) Early maternal investment in male and female African elephant calves. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 18:353–361

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Lepper BT, Frolking TA, Fisher DC, Goldstein G, Wymer DA, Sanger JE, Ogden JG, III, Hooge PE (1991) Intestinal contents of a late Pleistocene mastodont from midcontinental North America. Quat Res 36:120–125

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Lister AM (1996) Sexual dimorphism in the mammoth pelvis: An aid to gender determination. In: Shoshani J, Tassy P (eds) The pro-boscidea: Evolution and palaeoecology of elephants and their relatives). Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp 254–259

    Google Scholar 

  • Lister AM, Agenbroad LD (1994) Gender determinations of the Hot Springs mammoths. In: Agenbroad LD, Mead JI (eds) The Hot Springs mammoth site: A decade of fi eld and laboratory research in paleontology, geology, and paleoecology. The Mammoth Site of Hot Springs, SD, Hot Springs, pp 208–214

    Google Scholar 

  • MacPhee RDE, Marx PA (1997) The 40,000-year plague: Humans, hyperdisease, and fi rst-contact extinctions. In: Goodman S, Patterson B (eds) Natural change and human impact in Madagascar. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC, pp 169–217

    Google Scholar 

  • Martin PS (1967) Prehistoric Overkill. In: Martin PS, Wright HE, Jr (eds) Pleistocene extinctions: The search for a cause. Yale University Press, New Haven, pp 75–120

    Google Scholar 

  • Martin PS (2005) Twilight of the mammoths: Ice Age extinctions and the rewilding of America. University of California Press, Berkeley

    Google Scholar 

  • Meltzer DJ, Mead JI (1983) The timing of late Pleistocene mammalian extinctions in North America. Quat Res 19:130–135

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Moss CJ (1988) Elephant memories: Thirteen years in the life of an elephant family. William Morrow, New York

    Google Scholar 

  • Newman HN, Poole DFG (1974) Observations with scanning and transmission electron microscopy on the structure of human surface enamel. Arch Oral Biol 19:1135–1143

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Osborn HF (1936) Proboscidea: A monograph of the discovery, evolution, migration and extinction of the mastodonts and elephants of the world. Vol. 1: Moeritherioidea, Deinotherioidea, Mastodontoidea. The American Museum of Natural History, New York, 802 pp

    Google Scholar 

  • Polischuck SC, Hobson KA, Ramsay MA (2001) Use of stable-carbon and -nitrogen isotopes to assess weaning and fasting in female polar bears and their cubs. Can J Zool 79:499–511

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Poole JH (1987) Rutting behaviour in African elephants: The phenomenon of musth. Behaviour 102:283–316

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Poole JH, Moss CJ (1981) Musth in the African elephant, Loxodonta africana. Nature 292:830–831

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Roth VL (1984) How elephants grow: Heterochrony and the calibration of developmental stages in some living and fossil species. J Vert Paleontol 4:126–145

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Rountrey AN, Fisher DC, Vartanyan S, Fox DL (2007a) Carbon and nitrogen isotope analyses of a juvenile woolly mammoth tusk: Evidence of weaning. Quat Intl 169–170:166–173

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Rountrey A, Fisher DC, Mol D, Lazarev P, Boeskorov G (2007b) Prenatal to early juvenile woolly mammoth life history as revealed by structural and compositional analyses. J Vert Paleontol 27 (Suppl to 3):136A

    Google Scholar 

  • Rountrey AN, Fisher DC, Mol D, Buigues B, Tikhonov AN, Lazarev PA, Boeskorov GG (Submitted). Stable isotope time-series in juvenile mammoth tusks. In: Boeskorov GG, Lazarev PA (eds) Proceedings of the 4th International Mammoth Conference, Yakutsk. 7 ms. pp., 2 fi gures

    Google Scholar 

  • Rozanski K, Araguás-Araguás L, Gonfi antini R (1993) Isotopic patterns in modern global precipitation. In: Swart PK, Lohmann KC, McKenzie J, Savin S (eds) Climate change in continental isotopic records. Am Geophys Union Geophys Mono 78:1–36

    Google Scholar 

  • Saunders JJ 1980 A model for man-mammoth relationships in late Pleistocene North America. Can J Anthropol 1:87–98

    Google Scholar 

  • Sher TM, Fisher DC (1995) Sexual dimorphism in Mammut ameri-canum. J Vert Paleontol 15(Suppl to 3):53A

    Google Scholar 

  • Sikes SK (1971) The natural history of the African elephant. Weiden-feld & Nicolson, London

    Google Scholar 

  • Slotow R, van Dyk G, Poole J, Page B, Klocke A (2000) Older bull elephants control young males. Nature 408:425–426

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Smith K, Fisher DC (2007) Sexual dimorphism in tusks of Great Lakes-region American mastodons (Mammut americanum). J Vert Paleontol 27 (Suppl to 3):149A

    Google Scholar 

  • Speth JD, Spielman KA (1983) Energy source, protein metabolism, and hunter-gatherer subsistence strategies. J Anthropol Archaeol 2:1–31

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Stiner MC (1991) Food procurement and transport by human and non-human predators. J Archaeol Sci 18:455–482

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Stuart-Williams HLeQ, Schwarcz HP (1997) Oxygen isotopic determination of climatic variation using phosphate from beaver bone, tooth enamel, and dentine. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 61:2539–2550

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Taylor JG (1969) William Turner's journeys to the caribou country with the Labrador Eskimos in 1780. Ethnohistory 16: 141–164

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Teeri JA, Stowe LG (1976) Climatic patterns and the distribution of C4 grasses in North America. Oecologia 23:1–12

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Trapani J, Fisher DC (2003) Discriminating proboscidean taxa using features of the Schreger pattern in tusk dentin. J Archaeol Sci 30:429–438

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Vereshchagin NK, Tikhonov AN (1986) [A study of mammoth tusks.] Issledovaniya bivnyey mamontov. In: Vereshchagin NK, Kuz&mina, IYe (eds) Mlekopitayushchiye chetvertichnoy fauny SSSR. Trudi Zoologicheskovo Instituta 149:3–14

    Google Scholar 

  • Vereschchagin NK, Tikhonov AN (1999) Exterior of the mammoth. Cranium 1:1–93

    Google Scholar 

  • Warwick R, Williams PL (1973) Gray's anatomy, 35th British Edition. WB Saunders, Philadelphia

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Editor information

Editors and Affiliations

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

Copyright information

© 2009 Springer Science + Business Media B.V.

About this chapter

Cite this chapter

Fisher, D.C. (2009). Paleobiology and Extinction of Proboscideans in the Great Lakes Region of North America. In: Haynes, G. (eds) American Megafaunal Extinctions at the End of the Pleistocene. Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-8793-6_4

Download citation

Publish with us

Policies and ethics