Archeologists in southern Chile’s Region X are continuing to revel in the chance 2007 discovery of molars and bones belonging to a stegomastodon, a species of prehistoric elephant. Their ongoing research suggests that the site, known as La Plata, could eventually rival nearby Monte Verde in terms of historical significance.
The stegomastodon (gonfoterio in Spanish) is a prehistoric mammal that looks like a stronger version of the modern elephant. It lived in the Andes region approximately 13,000 years ago.
Monte Verde Annex?
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Monte Verde Annex?
http://www.patagoniatimes.cl/index.php/ ... EMENT.html
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Re: Monte Verde Annex?
Thanks for the link Min.
This will be fun to watch.
I am waiting for them to find some scrimshaw carved on one of those tusks!
This will be fun to watch.
I am waiting for them to find some scrimshaw carved on one of those tusks!
Re: Monte Verde Annex?
According to Wikipedia "the Stegomastodon species occupied warmer, lower-altitude habitats east of the Andes, while the related gomphothere Cuvieronius hyodon occupied cooler, higher-altitude habitats".
Aren't Monte Verde and La Plata relatively low on the west side of the Andes?
Aren't Monte Verde and La Plata relatively low on the west side of the Andes?
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Re: Monte Verde Annex?
Gee. Wiki might have gotten something wrong? Imagine that?
Anyway, you're right. Monte Verde is West of the Andes, relatively near the sea, and about half way along the Chilean coast. I assuming that the new site is nearby because they said so.
There is an inlet there (use Google maps for Monte Verde) opening into what looks like a good sized bay which keeps my cherished boats in the mix!

Anyway, you're right. Monte Verde is West of the Andes, relatively near the sea, and about half way along the Chilean coast. I assuming that the new site is nearby because they said so.
There is an inlet there (use Google maps for Monte Verde) opening into what looks like a good sized bay which keeps my cherished boats in the mix!
Something is wrong here. War, disease, death, destruction, hunger, filth, poverty, torture, crime, corruption, and the Ice Capades. Something is definitely wrong. This is not good work. If this is the best God can do, I am not impressed.
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Re: Monte Verde Annex?
No, I don't think so in this case. The Andes are the second highest mountain range on the face of the earth. About twice as high as the Alps and the Rockies. And barren. That's a formidable obstacle for vegetarian pachyderms. Literally an insurmountable one, I think. Remember Hannibal trying to get 28 war elephants across the Alps? At 'only' half the Andes altitude exactly one elephant made it across to the Italian battle fields! So I have a very hard time conceiving of Stegawhatsisname west of the Andes.Minimalist wrote:Gee. Wiki might have gotten something wrong? Imagine that?
Of course! But pachyderms rafting or swimming east across the Pacific to populate the coast of Chile is a bit too much for even me.There is an inlet there (use Google maps for Monte Verde) opening into what looks like a good sized bay which keeps my cherished boats in the mix!
So what's the story here? It don't jive.
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Re: Monte Verde Annex?
Except...if the bones are on BOTH sides of the Andes then, ipso facto, Wiki is wrong to say that they were not. Unless one wants to speculate that primitive man carried them across the Andes just so they could screw with Wikipedia when it was finally invented.
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Re: Monte Verde Annex?
Down in Patagonia the Andes aren't nearly so big (no more than 2,000 metres IIRC) and there are river valleys that (today) lead from Argentina into Chile.
Re: Monte Verde Annex?
2,000 Meters is "no more than" the average Rocky or Alp. A very effective pachyderm barrier.Sam Salmon wrote:Down in Patagonia the Andes aren't nearly so big (no more than 2,000 metres IIRC)
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Re: Monte Verde Annex?
We all see/hear/perceive what we want to.Rokcet Scientist wrote:2,000 Meters is "no more than" the average Rocky or Alp. A very effective pachyderm barrier.Sam Salmon wrote:Down in Patagonia the Andes aren't nearly so big (no more than 2,000 metres IIRC)
My point is that there is no impenetrable wall that stops species of any kind from passing from one side of Patagonia to the other-that is nonsense.and there are river valleys that....lead from Argentina into Chile.
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Re: Monte Verde Annex?
It would hardly be the first time that Wikipedia was wrong.
In fact....there are some people who don't think it has ever been right.
In fact....there are some people who don't think it has ever been right.
Something is wrong here. War, disease, death, destruction, hunger, filth, poverty, torture, crime, corruption, and the Ice Capades. Something is definitely wrong. This is not good work. If this is the best God can do, I am not impressed.
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Re: Monte Verde Annex?
They tested that precept 2 years ago. They compared a couple thousand random entries in Wikipedia with entries on the same subjects in the Encyclopædia Britannica. The latter had 12% more mistakes than the former...Minimalist wrote:It would hardly be the first time that Wikipedia was wrong.
In fact....there are some people who don't think it has ever been right.
Re: Monte Verde Annex?
And that 12% was wrong for the same reason that Wiki is wrong in regards to the Stego. New evidence was discovered AFTER publishing. Luckily for Wiki, it's much easier to update.
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Re: Monte Verde Annex?
Especially if there are desirable females and/or food on the other side.Sam Salmon wrote:My point is that there is no impenetrable wall that stops species of any kind from passing from one side of Patagonia to the other-that is nonsense.
Re: Monte Verde Annex?
Ever seen the Chilean/West Patagonian/Andean landscape, Monk? I have. Been there, done that.Forum Monk wrote:Especially if there are desirable females and/or food on the other side.Sam Salmon wrote:My point is that there is no impenetrable wall that stops species of any kind from passing from one side of Patagonia to the other-that is nonsense.
Rocks, rocks, and rocks. It's like a moonscape. Nothing grows there. It's a giant rock desert.
There is/was nothing there for a pachyderm from the rich eastern pampas to aspire to. No flora = no food. And thus no females either.
Also, 15,000 years ago the Würm was still going on. So, unbelievable as it may seem if you know the present landscape, the Andes and west Patagonia were even colder and dryer than today. Thus the Andes and west Patagonia were even more impenetrable to elephantine fauna then than they are today.
Show me a rich, green flora on the Andes' west side, 15,000 years ago, and I'll be willing to consider pachyderms there. But those would have come south in a looong walk from the north. Along a green coast, on the Andes' west side. They didn't cross the high and dry Andes, because they couldn't.
However, Chile has never been green and/or wet in the last 60,000 years. There wasn't a habitat for elephantine creatures during the entire Würm on the Andes' west side.
Today there still isn't, but that's moot of course, as there are no pachyderms in south America anymore.
(unless you count tapirs, but you won't find any of those outside the dense lowland tropical rain forest).
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Re: Monte Verde Annex?
And yet the bones are there.....
Perhaps the Monte Verdeans carried them over the Andes when they were done with the boating season?
Seriously, if the bones are correctly identified (and, I'd have to hope they were careful about that before making the announcement) then they either lived there or were brought there.
Perhaps the Monte Verdeans carried them over the Andes when they were done with the boating season?
Seriously, if the bones are correctly identified (and, I'd have to hope they were careful about that before making the announcement) then they either lived there or were brought there.
Something is wrong here. War, disease, death, destruction, hunger, filth, poverty, torture, crime, corruption, and the Ice Capades. Something is definitely wrong. This is not good work. If this is the best God can do, I am not impressed.
-- George Carlin
-- George Carlin