Sabre Cat Jefferson's Ground Sloth Stag Moose Woodland Musk Ox Long-nosed Peccary Mastodon Bison Antiquus Woolly Mammoth

Mastodon

Mastodon

(Mammut americanum)

Mastodon remains are common in Illinois. Three sites lie within the Champaign-Urbana area—one is in east Urbana. Indigenous to North America, mastodons evolved nearly 4 million years ago and between 40,000, and, 10,000 years ago, ranged throughout what is now central the United States. Large and hairy, mastodons commonly stood 10 feet tall at the shoulder. They possessed large distinctive multiple-cone-shaped teeth, adapted for browsing on trees and shrubbery. Long tusks were used to break branches, strip bark, and uproot plants. Some mastodons reached 50 years of age. Mastodons are not true elephants. They belong to a genetic lineage that is now extinct. Their presence in Illinois overlapped with of the Woolly Mammoth and that of early humans. The mastodon line, however, expired long before that of mammoths.

Sabre Cat
Jefferson's Ground Sloth
Stag Moose
Woodland Musk Ox
Long-nosed Peccary
Mastodon
Bison
Woolly Mammoth
Ice Age Residents of Illinois


Updated 10/2/2009 CAB

ILLINOIS STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
E. Donald McKay, III, Interim Director

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