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A Mammoth Gift
One Couple's Generosity Builds a World-Class Museum
(ARA) - On Sept. 14, 2002, Philip and Elenora Anderson were inducted
into the South Dakota Hall of Fame, an honor they owe to a huge,
elephant-like prehistoric beast. The story begins in 1974, when
Phil hired a contractor to level 20 acres of land he owned in the
city of Hot Springs, S. D. in preparation for a housing development.
Little did he know that he and his wife would soon become science
celebrities.
"There was a large hill and I decided to grade it down about 30
feet. It was a real surprise," says Phil, when the earthmover sheared
off what turned out to be a mammoth tusk. Soon after the discovery,
scientists began excavating the site and realized that it contained
many mammoths.
These colossal, animals roamed the Great Plains of South Dakota
during the Ice Age 26,000 years ago. Columbian mammoths weighed
up to 10 tons and stood 12 to 14 feet high at the shoulders; they
consumed 700 pounds of vegetation a day. Their favorite grasses
and plants thrived year-round near the warm mineral water springs
for which Hot Springs is known.
The mammoths drank from the abundant pools the springs provided.
One watering hole, however, was a death trap. Probing the pond's
edge for vegetation and water, the mammoths either slipped or ventured
into the pool only to find they could not make their way back up
the steep banks that had been made treacherously slippery from pond
water percolating up through the soil.
As these huge animals struggled to free themselves, the earth gave
way like a mudslide, and the mammoths, exhausted, either drowned
or starved to death. The first mammoths that died in the watering
hole were buried by mud and sand. Others came, suffered that same
fate, and were buried above their unfortunate predecessors. This
went on for 300 to 700 years, until the watering hole eventually
filled up with earth -- a grave for more than 100 mammoths and other
Ice Age animals.
The site has yielded many impressive fossils, but perhaps the most
exciting find was that of a completely articulated skeleton of a
mammoth in 1979. The excavation crew found the animal lying on its
back with all the bones in place where the animal had died.
Further excavation also unearthed remains of the rare and extinct
giant short-faced bear, the most powerful predator of the Ice Ages.
This giant bear measured a little over five feet tall at the shoulder
when standing on all four legs, and weighed close to 1,400 pounds.
The Andersons decided that the land on which Phil planned to build
houses would be more valuable as a resource for scientific study,
and donated the burial place to a non-profit community corporation
to care for the bones. "We didn't know anything about bones," says
Elenora. "We talked about it and decided if it was something, that
it should stay where it was." Twenty-eight years later, bones are
still being excavated at this world-class paleontological site.
In 1980, the Mammoth Site of Hot Springs was designated a National
Natural Landmark by the U.S. Department of the Interior. In 1985,
a 20,000-square-foot visitor center was built over the now-dry watering
hole, with the mammoth bones displayed "as found". An extended exhibit
hall was added in 2001. More than 100,000 people travel to the Black
Hills and Hot Springs to visit the site every year. Volunteers,
scientists and diggers come from around the world to help make this
one of the world's foremost ongoing paleontological sites. "Hot
Springs needed something for tourists, and school kids on field
trips learn about mammoths and the Ice Age. But more importantly,
scientists from all over the world travel here to do their research,"
says Elenora.
Each year the mammoth count goes up. The grand tally of unearthed
mammoths now tops 50, and scientists estimate that the site contains
the remains of over 100 mammoths. With less than 20 percent of the
sinkhole excavated, the site already lays claim to being the largest
primary accumulation of mammoth bones in North America.
The Andersons have never regretted their decision to preserve the
site. Says Phil, "All the people who've banded together to develop
and operate the site have done a wonderful job. I'm happy we didn't
sell it in the beginning or let other museums take the bones away
from here. It's been an experience of a lifetime as far as I'm concerned."
The Mammoth Site is open year-round, and guided tours are available.
For more information, call (605) 745-6017 or visit www.mammothsite.com.
Courtesy of ARA Content
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