Zazula Grant D, MacPhee Ross D E, Metcalfe Jessica Z, Reyes Alberto V, Brock Fiona, Druckenmiller Patrick S, Groves Pamela, Harington C Richard, Hodgins Gregory W L, Kunz Michael L, Longstaffe Fred J, Mann Daniel H, McDonald H Gregory, Nalawade-Chavan Shweta, Southon John R
Yukon Palaeontology Program, Department of Tourism & Culture, Government of Yukon, Whitehorse, YT Y1A 2C6, Canada;
Department of Mammalogy, Division of Vertebrate Zoology, and Gilder Graduate School, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Dec 30;111(52):18460-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1416072111. Epub 2014 Dec 1.
Existing radiocarbon ((14)C) dates on American mastodon (Mammut americanum) fossils from eastern Beringia (Alaska and Yukon) have been interpreted as evidence they inhabited the Arctic and Subarctic during Pleistocene full-glacial times (∼ 18,000 (14)C years B.P.). However, this chronology is inconsistent with inferred habitat preferences of mastodons and correlative paleoecological evidence. To establish a last appearance date (LAD) for M. americanum regionally, we obtained 53 new (14)C dates on 36 fossils, including specimens with previously published dates. Using collagen ultrafiltration and single amino acid (hydroxyproline) methods, these specimens consistently date to beyond or near the ∼ 50,000 y B.P. limit of (14)C dating. Some erroneously "young" (14)C dates are due to contamination by exogenous carbon from natural sources and conservation treatments used in museums. We suggest mastodons inhabited the high latitudes only during warm intervals, particularly the Last Interglacial [Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5] when boreal forests existed regionally. Our (14)C dataset suggests that mastodons were extirpated from eastern Beringia during the MIS 4 glacial interval (∼ 75,000 y ago), following the ecological shift from boreal forest to steppe tundra. Mastodons thereafter became restricted to areas south of the continental ice sheets, where they suffered complete extinction ∼ 10,000 (14)C years B.P. Mastodons were already absent from eastern Beringia several tens of millennia before the first humans crossed the Bering Isthmus or the onset of climate changes during the terminal Pleistocene. Local extirpations of mastodons and other megafaunal populations in eastern Beringia were asynchrononous and independent of their final extinction south of the continental ice sheets.
关于来自白令海东部(阿拉斯加和育空地区)的美洲乳齿象(Mammut americanum)化石的现有放射性碳((14)C)年代测定结果,被解释为它们在更新世全冰期(约公元前18,000个(14)C年)期间栖息在北极和亚北极地区的证据。然而,这个年代顺序与推断的乳齿象栖息地偏好以及相关的古生态证据不一致。为了确定美洲乳齿象在该地区的最后出现日期(LAD),我们获得了36块化石的53个新的(14)C年代测定结果,包括之前已发表年代的标本。使用胶原蛋白超滤和单氨基酸(羟脯氨酸)方法,这些标本的年代一致地追溯到(14)C测年极限约50,000年前或接近该时间。一些错误的“年轻”(14)C年代是由于来自自然源的外源碳污染以及博物馆使用的保护处理造成的。我们认为乳齿象仅在温暖时期栖息在高纬度地区,特别是末次间冰期[海洋同位素阶段(MIS)5],当时该地区存在北方森林。我们的(14)C数据集表明,在MIS 4冰期(约75,000年前),随着生态从北方森林向草原苔原的转变,乳齿象从白令海东部灭绝。此后乳齿象局限于大陆冰盖以南的地区,在那里它们在约公元前10,000个(14)C年完全灭绝。在第一批人类穿越白令地峡或末次更新世末期气候变化开始之前的几十万年里,白令海东部就已经没有乳齿象了。白令海东部乳齿象和其他大型动物种群的局部灭绝是异步的,并且与它们在大陆冰盖以南的最终灭绝无关。