Texas hunter's ‘old stump' find was actually a rare mammoth tusk
A local visitor to the O2 Ranch believed he came across something special while hunting on the property in West Texas. But ranch manager Will Juett took some convincing. After researchers from Sul Ross State University (SRSU) descended on the historic property, Juett realized the discovery was indeed something special: It was an extremely rare mammoth tusk.
'I was skeptical when a deer hunter showed me a picture of what he thought was a fossil,' Juett said in a university announcement. 'I figured it was likely just an old stump.'
The investigation began soon after Juett contacted Bryon Schroeder, a longtime acquaintance and director of SRSU's Center for Big Bend Studies (CBBS). Along with CBBS archeologist Erika Blecha and a few other colleagues, Schroeder's team traveled to O2 Ranch to examine the object found sticking out the ground in a creekbed's drainage area.
'We realized pretty quickly there was not more to the skeleton, just an isolated tusk that had been separated from the rest of the remains,' Schroeder explained.
Researchers worked over two days to create a protective cast around the tusk for transport. After covering the fossil in plaster-soaked burlap strips, Schroeder's group then constructed a frame around the ranch discovery before hauling it to SRSU for further analysis.
Although multiple mammoth and mastodon species existed across modern North America until roughly 12,000 years ago, few of the elephant relatives ever migrated into West Texas. According to Schroeder, only a single mammoth tusk excavated from the Trans-Pecos region has ever been carbon-dated—and that happened over 60 years ago. Even then, the process at the time was far less accurate than dating methods used today that can narrow down an age range to within 500 years. Schroeder believes a more precise estimate for the O2 Ranch tusk should be completed within the next few months.
It's too early to determine the exact mammoth species just yet. But as Gizmodo noted, the tusk possibly belonged to a Columbian mammoth (Mammuthus columbi), one of the only species documented in Texas. The Columbian mammoth was a distant cousin of the more recognizable woolly mammoth, but could still grow to around 13 feet tall while weighing around 10 tons. The reasons behind their eventual extinction remain debatable, but they likely died out due to a combination of factors including climate change and human hunting. It's a bit poetic, then, that hunting is what led humans back to one of these megafauna in 2025.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
19-05-2025
- Yahoo
Archaeologists Unearth Hundreds of Pre-columbian Weapons, Artifacts
Archaeologists working in Mexico City have unearthed hundreds of obsidian artifacts dating back to pre-Columbian Mesoamerica and the Mexica Empire, according to a new study published in the journal Proceedings of the Natural Academy of Sciences. Researchers found 788 obsidian artifacts, including sacrificial knives, blades, and ear spools, at the Temple Mayor in Tenochtitlan. Roughly 90 percent of the artifacts were sourced from Sierra de Pachuca, which was known for producing obsidian of spectacular green and golden colors. "Although the Mexicas preferred green obsidian, the high diversity of obsidian types, mainly in the form of non-ritual artifacts, suggests that obsidian tools from multiple sources reached the capital of the Empire through market instead of direct acquisition in the outcrop,' lead author Diego Matadamas-Gomora said in a press release. 'By studying where this material came from, we can explore the movement of goods across Mesoamerica.' By studying the source of the obsidian, scientists were able to ascertain a tremendous amount of information about the ancient society's cultural norms as well as its global reach. It was determined that the objects were made using eight distinct obsidian sources, some of which came from well outside Mexica's borders. Some of it was even pulled from Purépecha territories, an enemy culture which Mexica was never able to vanquish. Researchers believe this indicates that Mexica was engaged in trade with their neighbors, despite diplomatic differences, a sparse contrast to what was previously believed about the society. Further excavations are set to take place in the area to hopefully determine more about Mexica's international reach.
Yahoo
05-05-2025
- Yahoo
Columbian mammoth fossil found on Mississippi Coast
Video above shows mammoth tusk found in Madison County. HARRISON COUNTY, Miss. (WJTV) – Fossil fragments of a Columbian mammoth were recently discovered on the Mississippi Coast. According to the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ), Cole Moody discovered the fragments while wading at low tide in Harrison County. Mammoth tusk discovered in Madison County Officials said Moody's discovery is the first record of mammoth for the Mississippi Gulf Coast region. They said the fossil gives State Survey geologists a much better understanding of the ice-age landscape now lost beneath the sea. MDEQ officials the fossil remains of the Columbian mammoth were buried in the Pleistocene meadow soil, now drowned by the Mississippi Sound. The fossils were then likely re-exhumed from the sea bed by strong storms and ocean currents. Cole's fossil Columbian mammoth tooth finds were confirmed and documented by MDEQ's State Survey scientists and reposited in the Mississippi Museum of Natural Science's paleontological collections for further study. Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
21-04-2025
- Yahoo
Texas geology students unearth bone of giant dinosaur in Big Bend National Park
BREWSTER COUNTY, Texas – Budding geologists on a research expedition in a Texas national park have unearthed a massive vertebra from a giant long-necked dinosaur that roamed during the Cretaceous Period. Students from Sul Ross State University's geology program visited Big Bend National Park in March to retrieve the bone belonging to an Alamosaurus, the largest known land-dwelling animal to have lived in North America. Fossils from the sauropod are known to be found in the Big Bend but are usually fragmentary and poorly preserved, according to researchers. Cave Discovery Of 6,000-Year-old Hunter's Toolkit Offers Rare Glimpse Into Earliest Lives In West Texas The university said the trip's goals included conducting structural and stratigraphic analyses of Cretaceous—Eocene rocks. The specimen collected by the students, led by assistant professors Jesse Kelsch and Thomas Shiller, belongs to one of the most complete skeletons in the area, originally collected and described by researchers from the University of Texas in the 1970s. Associated vertebrae were previously collected from the same quarry by Shiller and his students and are currently being studied in the campus' paleontology article source: Texas geology students unearth bone of giant dinosaur in Big Bend National Park