10-year-old boy trips over 1.2M-year-old fossil in desert

A boy's misstep on a family hike in New Mexico has given the world a prehistoric wonder.

Ten-year-old Jude Sparks was on a desert hike in Las Cruces in November when he tripped over what turned out to be the fossilized tusk of a 1.2 million-year-old elephant-like creature, called a stegomastodon.

The family contacted New Mexico State University professor Peter Houde, and he and a team from the university spent a week digging up the skull in May after getting permission from the landowner.

Houde estimates the entire skull weighs about a ton.

He expects the to put the skull on exhibit after it's studied and reconstructed, which could take years.

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Citation: 10-year-old boy trips over 1.2M-year-old fossil in desert (2017, July 20) retrieved 19 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2017-07-year-old-boy-12m-year-old-fossil.html
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Prehistoric elephant skull excavated in New Mexico

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