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13 - Short–term fluctuations in small mammals of the late Pleistocene from eastern Washington

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 December 2009

Robert A. Martin
Affiliation:
Berry College, Georgia
Anthony D. Barnosky
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley
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Summary

A sustained local presence of terrestrial vertebrates, followed by burial and preservation, over an interval sufficiently long to record a population's evolution is an uncommon occurrence. In this chapter we describe a deposit that has preserved a relatively continuous faunal record of small land mammals from the late Pleistocene and early Holocene. In 1981 and 1982, field parties from the Burke Museum at the University of Washington collected approximately 15,000 bones and stratigraphic data from a roadside outcrop southwest of Kennewick in eastern Washington (Figure 13.1). Small vertebrates were obtained from the base of the exposed deposits to the uppermost beds. This report describes the depositional setting, the faunal composition and its changes, and the morphological changes in several local populations through the stratigraphic section.

Stratigraphy

General characteristics

The Kennewick Road Cut exposure is located approximately 11 km (7 miles) southwest of Kennewick, on highway 82, in the southwest quarter of Section 4, T. 7 N., R. 29 E., Pasco quadrangle. The exposure extends more than 140 m in a north–south direction along the west side of the highway (Figure 13.2). The locality lies at an elevation of 389 m in the southeast–trending Horse Heaven Hills.

The deposits consist of generally massive, tan–colored, poorly to moderately indurated silt ranging from 21 to 24 m in exposed thickness. Variations in thickness result from the north–south rise of the highway bed and the sloping surfaces of the hill. The most prominent sedimentary structures are a series of calcite–cemented layers (calcrete) that are typically less than 2 m in thickness.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1993

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