"I found the mammoth tooth about ten yards upstream from the bridge we had our family pictures on. It was partially buried on the left side of the creek. It was completely out of the water on the creek bed," the 12-year-old wrote in a letter obtained by the inn.
The tooth was confirmed to have belonged to a woolly mammoth, according to several scholars, including Dale Gnidovec of The Ohio State University's Orton Geological Museum, Nigel Brush of Ashland University's Geology Department and P. Nick Kardulias of the College of Wooster's Program of Archeology, according to an August 7 blog post by the Inn. More specifically, the tooth was confirmed to be an upper third molar."Teeth of Woolly Mammoths are distinguished by parallel ridges, which the animals used to grind grass and seeds," the Inn writes in its post. "We couldn't be prouder to be the site of such an extraordinary find and unforgettable experience!"
Russia was the last known home of the woolly mammoth, with a small population surviving on Wrangel Island until 1650 BC. Most of the mammoths on the Eurasian and North American mainland are believed to have died out roughly 10,000 years ago. Russia is also home to Yuka, by far the best preserved mammoth mummy in the world, which died some 39,000 years ago, but was preserved in the frozen tundra of Yakutia and discovered in 2010.According to the National Geographic, mammoths were similar in size to elephants but had narrower skulls, smaller ears, shorter tails and, of course, lots of hair.
I love streams like that! (We have little like that in FL where the highest point in the state is only 345 feet, near Alabama Border in the panhandle. Meanwhile, the highest point on the peninsula is 310 feet, "Sugarloaf Mountain" (probably so named because it's simply a big old sand dune.) It's about dead center in peninsula and about 20 miles WNW of Orlando.
In my home - SEE NAME - on the W side of Indian River there was a sign at the top of "High Point" neighborhood which bragged that, at 87? feet, it was "The highest point overlooking water on the East Coast of Florida!" (Quite a stretch, eh? Anything to sell houses.)
(All refs below to google maps. Copy and pasted. Sorry.) We used to party in those woods but now there's a house there at < 28.401980, -80.750510 >.
Also, From Sharpes through Cocoa to S. Rockledge runs "Indian River Drive" (SR515) ("The River Road" ) (From North at < US-1 & Indian River Drive Sharpes FL 32926> via SR515 to <3298 Rockledge Dr, Rockledge, FL 32955> is consistently listed as one of the best places to bike in the USA.. Few hills, few cars etc. It used to be US-1 until 1930? but now is SR515)
Just FYI. We're about 50 mins ESE of Orlando. (From OIA/MCO? about 37 miles/35 minutes.)
R.C.