The Peterborough Examiner

Scientist finds fossil evidence of sabre-toothed cat in southern Alberta

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MEDICINE HAT, ALTA. — Scientists have found fossil evidence from the last ice age of a sabre-toothed cat in southern Alberta — the northernmo­st record of the predator.

A study by the Royal Ontario Museum and the University Toronto was published Friday in the Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences.

“We were describing the different cat fossils that were found in the Medicine Hat area in Pleistocen­e deposits,” said Ashley Reynolds, a graduate student at the Royal Ontario Museum who led the study as part of her PhD at the University of Toronto.

“We found potentiall­y four different species, (including) the Smilodon fatalis, which is the famous sabre-toothed cat.”

Reynolds said the sabre-toothed cat is most commonly represente­d in popular culture, such as Diego from the children’s “Ice Age” movies and from the end credits of “The Flinstones” television cartoon.

Researcher­s also documented three other types of cats, including the American lion, a lynx or bobcat, and potentiall­y a cave lion. The fossil of the cave lion had previously only been found in fossils in Yukon and Alaska.

Supersized cats went extinct at the end of the Pleistocen­e epoch, which was about 11,000 years ago. They hunted large herbivores — such as camels, horses and young mammoths — that were also present at the time.

The sabre-toothed cat fossil is a partial bone of one of the cat’s large forepaws.

“Prior to this being described and its record being confirmed ... the previous northernmo­st record was in Idaho, which is about 1,000 kilometres south of Medicine Hat,” Reynolds said.

Her co-author and supervisor, David Evans, said it’s an unusual find.

“Smilodon is best known from tar pit deposits in California and South America,” he said in a news release. “So, it’s both exciting and surprising to find evidence of this iconic sabre-toothed predator in Canada.”

Reynolds said her interest in comparing the anatomy of big cats led her to specialize in the study of prehistori­c ones.

“I was looking through our drawers in collection­s on another project,” she said. “I found a little bag that had a bone in that was labelled as Smilodon and I thought that doesn’t seem right.

“I went to our collection­s manager and my supervisor and said, ‘Do you guys know anything about this?’ ”

After reviewing the bone, which was first collected from the area in the late 1960s, it turned out that it was a sabretooth­ed cat fossil.

“It was really exciting,” said Reynolds. “This is way cooler than we thought it would be.”

 ?? DANIELLE DUFAULT THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Lead study author Ashley Reynolds holds the Smilodon fatalis metacarpal. On the table are an S. fatalis skull and canine tooth from Peru.
DANIELLE DUFAULT THE CANADIAN PRESS Lead study author Ashley Reynolds holds the Smilodon fatalis metacarpal. On the table are an S. fatalis skull and canine tooth from Peru.

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