Saturday, September 22, 2007
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Natural Trap Cave, Big Horn Mountains, Wyoming

In the Pleistocene Epoch, thousands of mammals fell into this cave, an 85-foot-deep karst limestone sinkhole on the western slope of the Big Horn Mountains in north-central Wyoming. Larry Martin, a vertebrate paleontologist from the University of Kansas, was one of the scientists leading this dig in the mid-1970s. Among the more than 30,000 specimens recovered were the bones from animals now extinct, such as mammoths, camels, American lions, woodland musk oxen, cheetahs, dire wolves, short-faced bears and four kinds of horses.


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