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Preliminary study of rodents from the Golliher B Assemblage of Meade County, Kansas, USA indicates an intense cold period near the end of the Pleistocene

Journal article published in 2011 by Robert A. Martin, Pablo Peláez-Campomanes ORCID, James G. Honey
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Preprint: policy unknown
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Postprint: policy unknown
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Abstract

Submission: 15 June 2007. Acceptance: 18 May 2011 ; An assemblage of rodents recovered from a thin layer of sediments along Sand Creek on the Golliher Ranch in Meade County, Kansas, indicates that cold steppe conditions likely prevailed for a brief time near the close of the Pleistocene around 12,500 radiocarbon years ago. This environment is suggested by the northern disjunct rodents Zapus princeps, Microtus pennsylvanicus, Thomomys cf. talpoides and the presumed cold steppe vole Microtus (Pedomys) parmaleei, n. sp., plus the absence of cotton rats. Comparison of meadow vole m1 crown morphology diversity through the late Pleistocene in Kansas shows that the modern pattern of diversity developed in a brief period of 1500 years, possibly during the Younger Dryas interval. A cement-filled prism fold, a feature commonly encountered in extinct species of Mimomys with rooted molars, appears in three rootless first lower molars of Microtus pennsylvanicus. The Golliher B assemblage helps to fill in the late Pleistocene history of rodents in the ongoing Meade Basin Rodent Project. ; Peer reviewed