Times Colonist

Fossils of tiny beaver species found

Previously unknown species unearthed in eastern Oregon

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GRANTS PASS, Oregon — A fossilized skull and teeth from a newly described species of beaver that lived 28 million years ago have been unearthed in eastern Oregon.

The fossils worked their way out of the soil within a mile of the visitor centre at the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, said the monument’s paleontolo­gist, Joshua Samuels.

The find is significan­t, he said, because unlike the other species of ancient beavers found at the monument, this one appears related to the modern beaver, a symbol of Oregon found on the state flag. The others all went extinct.

The species is named Microtheri­omys brevirhinu­s.

It was less than half the size of a modern beaver and related to beavers from Asia that crossed the Bering land bridge to North America seven million years ago, Samuels said.

It roamed what is now the monument during the Oligocene period, about 30 million years after the dinosaurs, along with three-toed horses, two-horned rhinos, giant pigs, sabre-tooths, rabbits and several

species of dogs.

The fossils, and those of 20 other rodent species, were described in the May 15 edition of the journal Annals of Carnegie Museum.

University of Oregon paleontolo­gist Samantha Hopkins said in an email it will be exciting to analyze the find in an evolutiona­ry framework.

“While there is relatively little castorid (beaver species) diversity today, there are hundreds of species (many of which are really important members of their faunal communitie­s) in the fossil record of the Northern Hemisphere, and a better understand­ing of their diversity and evolutiona­ry relationsh­ips has a lot to tell us about processes driving mammalian evolution over the last 40 million years,” she wrote.

Samuels said the age of the beaver fossils was deduced by their location between two layers of volcanic ash that have been dated from radioactiv­e isotopes. “We’ve got badlands exposures here,” he said. “As they get wet, whenever it rains or snows and the temperatur­e heats or cools, the claystone these things are in shrinks and swells. The bones are pushed out. The rock breaks apart. The fossils are exposed. This one just came out of the ground it was preserved in.”

Fossils from nearly 100 species of mammals have been found on the monument, Samuels said.

 ?? SKETCH BY JOSHUA SAMUELS, U.S. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE, VIA AP ?? The modern beaver, at right, dwarfs its prehistori­c relative, Microtheri­omys brevirhinu­s.
SKETCH BY JOSHUA SAMUELS, U.S. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE, VIA AP The modern beaver, at right, dwarfs its prehistori­c relative, Microtheri­omys brevirhinu­s.

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