Reeve's Bonebed Explained

Reeve's Bonebed is a geological formation in Presidio County, Texas, with the coordinates of 29.9° N, 104.2° W. It consists of fossiliferous sedimentary rock dating from the late Eocene and early Oligocene. It is well known for its vertebrate fossils, hence the name "bone bed". A few invertebrate fossils are also present.

Geology

Reeve's bonebed lies in the Vieja Formation.

Ecology

The University of Texas has a large collection of fossils from Reeve's Bonebed which represent numerous different taxonomic groups. In the following table, the number of specimens of each taxon in the university collection from the bonebed is indicated in the abundance column:[1]

Mammals

OrderFamilyGenus/SpeciesAbundance (?/870)Notes
CetartiodactylaMerycoidodontidaeMerycoidodon91: common
Bathygenys709: extremely commonhundreds of endocasts (see below)
LeptomerycidaeHendryomeryx defordi2: extremely rare
Leptomeryx10: rare
OromerycidaeEotylopus reedi1: extremely rare
AgriochoeridaeAgriochoerus15: average abundance
ProtoceratidaeLeptotragulus1: extremely rare
Heteromeryx defordi2: extremely rare
RodentiaEutypomyidaeEutypomys inexpectatus13: average abundance
IschyromyidaePseudotomus johanniculi1: extremely rareholotype
Leptotomus1: extremely rare
CylindrodontidaeArdynomys1: extremely rare
Cylindrodon fontis3: extremely rare
PerissodactylaColodon4: rare
EquidaeMesohippus11: average abundance
HyracodontidaeHyracodon primus1: extremely rare
BrontotheriidaeMenodus bakeri1: extremely rare
CarnivoraMiacoideaMiacis cognitus1: extremely rareholotype
CreodontaHyaenodontidaeHyaenodon2: extremely rare

Other taxa

Additional fossils to which a genus cannot be assigned include:

Oreodont braincasts

Reeve's Bonebed is known for the recovery of casts of the brain cavity (endocast) of oreodonts.[2] When an animal dies and the soft tissues decay, sediments fill the orifices of the bones including the brain case inside the skull. If the bone subsequently falls apart, a cast of the inside of the skull may remain intact. Hundreds of brain casts, mainly from Bathygenys, were recovered from Reeve's Bonebed. These casts have been used to gauge the size of the brain of these animals, as well as the size of the various brain lobes. The physical arrangement of the brain can give clues about the life of the living animal, such as how important smell was to it, as used in CT scans of Tyrannosaurus. Studies involving more than 150 of these endocasts have been performed from the Reeve's Bonebed samples.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: University of Texas, Austin. Reeves bonebed. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110929032524/http://www.npl.utexas.edu/vpl/databases/index.php?page=33&page_size=10&mode=search&action=search&searchtype=&taxon=&locality=Reeves. 2011-09-29. 2020-05-26.
  2. Web site: Oreodont braincasts.
  3. Macrini. Thomas E.. Description of a Digital Cranial Endocast of Bathygenys reevesi (Merycoidodontidae; Oreodontoidea) and Implications for Apomorphy-Based Diagnosis of Isolated, Natural Endocasts. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 29. 4. 1199–1211. 10.1671/039.029.0413. 2009.