The
Pygmy or
Channel Islands
Mammoth (
Mammuthus exilis) is an
extinct species of
dwarf elephant descended from the
Columbian mammoth (
M.
columbi). A case of island or
insular dwarfism,
M. exilis was
only to tall at the shoulder and weighed about , in contrast to its
tall, ancestor.
Remains of
M. exilis have been discovered on three of the northern
Channel Islands
of California
since 1856: Santa Cruz
, Santa Rosa, and
San
Miguel
, which together with Anacapa
were the
highest portions of the now mostly submerged superisland of
Santa Rosae. The late
Pleistocene elephant may have lived on the
islands until the arrival of the
Chumash
people during the early
Holocene,
between 10,800 and 11,300 years ago.
Radiocarbon dating indicates
M.
exilis existed on the island for at least 47,000 years prior
(which is the approximate limit of the dating method).
Modern elephants are excellent swimmers, and the ancestors of
M. exilis most likely swam the to Santa Rosae. As the
population of mammoths increased, the lack of large predators and
the loss of habitat caused by the rise of sea levels at the end of
the ice age as Santa Rosae split into four islands favored smaller
animals.
M.
exilis should not be confused with the mammoths of Wrangel Island
or Saint Paul Island
, which were small races of the woolly mammoth (M. primigenius) and
which died out around 1700 B.C. and 4000 B.C.,
respectively.
See also
References