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Tag: La Brea Tar Pits

  • La Brea Tar Pits Celebrate 100 Years Of Discoveries

    Have you ever wondered where so many museums get their bones and artifacts? Many of them come from tar pits. The La Brea Tar Pits were first discovered in 1875 and have given scientists the bones of mammoths, mastodons, saber-toothed cats, dire wolves and other Ice Age creatures.

    Millions of years ago, animals who were wandering around, hiding from predators or searching for food, would often accidentally fall into the tar pits and become stuck there. Eventually they would sink to the bottom, where they became somewhat preserved. Scientists who dig at the site of tar pits such as the La Brea Tar Pits can dig up the bones of these animals and reconstruct them at museums and study them.

    “Earlier excavations really missed a great part of the story,” said John Harris, chief curator at the George C. Page Museum, which oversees the fossil collection. People “were only taking out bones they could see, but it’s the hidden bones that provide clues to the environment.”

    Excavations at the La Brea Tar Pits began in 1913 and since then, researchers have discovered close to 5.5 million bones from more than 600 species of animals and plants. The museum is celebrating 100 years of digging and will be displaying more artifacts and bones than ever, in honor of the milestone.

    Scientists have learned a lot from the fossils they have discovered in the pits, but are planning to leave some artifacts behind in case better excavation tools become available in the future and so future researches can uncover and study them as desired.

    Image from Wikimedia Commons.

  • La Brea Tar Pits Celebrates 100 Years of Discovery

    The animals paid with their lives, but visitors to the La Brea Tar Pits got in free today to celebrate the 100th anniversary of excavations on the site. The unassuming museum complex on Wilshire Boulevard is considered the only urban-located, Ice Age site that is being actively excavated.

    Since 1913, scientists have discovered more than five million fossils covering over 600 species of flora and fauna. Finds are displayed at the George C. Page Museum and they include saber-toothed cats, mammoths, mastodons, dire wolves (yes, Game of Thrones fans, they did exist) and smaller creatures down to ‘microfossils’, which will be featured during a museum-sponsored conference tomorrow.

    John M. Harris, chief curator of vertebrate studies at the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum, says of the mini-finds, “For decades we collected and presented statue-like examples of the mega-fauna of the past. Now we’re attempting to preserve a whole prehistoric ecosystem and chronicle how it changed over time.”

    Tomorrow’s Society of Vertebrate Paleontology annual conference will draw 1,300 paleontologists from across the globe to the site. Lecture topics include what insect-damaged fossils reveal about the Ice Age and technology that allows greater precision in dating and analyzing specimens.

    Microfossils cover finds such as insects and bits of larger animals or plants that are found with the larger fossils most familiar to most of us. On the recently discovered skull of an aging saber-tooth cat scientists call ‘Gimli’, Page laboratory supervisor, Shelley Cox, was most excited by the minuscule thorax of an ant.

    “Next to Gimli we found skeletal remains of at least 18 horned lizards, which eat ants,” says Cox in an LA Times interview. “So we were able to make a connection that sharpens our knowledge of a moment in time and place.”

    This is the first Society convention to be held in Los Angeles in almost four decades.

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    [Images via Page Museum Facebook.]