Cave Bear Discovery Links To County's Past
by Matt WeiserOnly about 30 miles from Ely as the crow flies, deep in the High Schells Wilderness, lies a remote cave that has yielded many secrets about prehistoric America. The most impressive stands about 6 feet high in a corner of the White Pine Public Museum: The most complete fossilized skeleton ever found of a giant short-faced bear — the largest North American meat-eater of the Ice Age. The short-faced bear — also referred to as the cave bear — was bigger than a modern-day polar bear. It roamed the whole continent during the Pleistocene, that era from about 2.5 million to 12,000 years ago when America was covered in glaciers. Fossil samples have been found from Alaska to Florida, but the most complete fossil from a single animal was found in White Pine County.
It happened in 1982 when a local cave-exploring club got curious about a small stream trickling from a mountain face. Once inside the small opening, they found a cavern stretching far back into the mountain, with a pond at the end. The pond was littered with bones, including those of the cave bear that now reside at the White Pine Museum. It was a real-life Indiana Jones moment for Steven Emslie, a young biologist at the time who was summoned to examine the find.
He was back doing research at the cave in summer 2018, and actually found more bones from the same bear, including some ribs, bones from a foot, a shoulder girdle and scapula. In 2019, he plans to use those bones to finish a new research paper on the bear that he left unfinished way back in 1985. This may include the first radiocarbon dating of the bear’s teeth. This will tell us, for the first time, when the bear lived. Until now, we have merely speculated that the bones are 12,000 years old. But Emslie said they could be as much as 60,000 years old. He also plans to return to White Pine County in summer 2019 to explore additional caves, including one that may have been home to a prehistoric raptor.
“That will reopen some new projects for the area, and maybe some new discoveries,” Emslie said. Stroud hopes the cave bear diorama will become a major new attraction at the museum. And rightly so, since the cave bear has always been the star attraction. “She is unique to our museum,” Stroud said. “No matter what your interest is, she will put you in awe.”
The White Pine Public Museum is located at 2000 Aultman St. in Ely, Nev., and is open daily from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., except Thanksgiving and Christmas day. Admission is $5 per person. For more information, call the museum at (775) 289-4710, or visit wpmuseum.org.