For
over a decade, paleontologists gambled on finding fossils in the hills north of
Las Vegas, Nev. Now they're reporting that their work has yielded a big payoff
— the bones of a saber-toothed cat.
"I
hate to say we hit the jackpot, this being Vegas — but we did!" Eric
Scott, curator of paleontology at the San Bernardino County Museum in
California, told the Highland
News. "Meat-eaters are generally uncommon in the fossil record. This
makes fossil remains of extinct carnivores very rare and special — and very
tough to find."
Saber-toothed
cats (aptly named Smilodon fatalis) were lion-size ambush predators, best
known for their long canine teeth; the cats went extinct at the end of the
Pleistocene Epoch some 11,000 years ago. The fossils discovered by the San
Bernardino County Museum team are estimated to be more than 15,000 years old.
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