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Science Evolution

North American Bison

Their Classification and Evolution

by (author) Jerry N. McDonald

Publisher
McDonald and Woodward Publishing Company
Initial publish date
Jun 2017
Category
Evolution
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781935778363
    Publish Date
    Jun 2017
    List Price
    $40.95

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Description

North American Bison was originally published in 1981. It was based primarily upon information contained in paleontological, zoological, and archaeological collections in some 30 museums and universities in Canada, Mexico, and the United States. The resulting skeletal and chronological patterns were then fitted into the emerging habitat patterns to allow an ecological interpretation of the adaptation of the various species of bison to different environments during their tenure of, probably, more than a million years on the North American continent.

About the author

Contributor Notes

Dr. Jerry McDonald is coauthor of two books about Indian mounds —— Indian Mounds of the Middle Ohio Valley and Indian Mounds of the Atlantic Coast —— and is currently writing two other books on the subject. All four are guides that identify and interpret publicly accessible mounds and other prehistoric architectural features in eastern North America.
Mounds and earthworks are the most conspicuous architectural features of prehistoric origin remaining on the landscape of eastern North America. Thousands of mounds, earthworks, graded and filled features, and shell heaps occurred between the Gulf and Atlantic coasts and the Great Plains and southern Canada when European settlement of this region began nearly 500 years ago. Yet, most of these features either have been destroyed or extensively modified.
Dr. McDonald is a geographer with degrees from Muskingum College (BA), the University of Texas (MA), and the UCLA (PhD) whose special interests include the identification, interpretation, appreciation, and preservation of historical and cultural landscape features. Dr. McDonald also reported research describing the 14,500—year—old Saltville, Virginia, pre—Clovis archeological site, one of the oldest archeological sites in the Western Hemisphere. See An Outline of the Pre—Clovis Archeology of SV—2, Saltville, Virginia—with Special Attention to a Bone Tool Dated 14,510 yr BP. He currently is the publisher at McDonald and Woodward Publishing Company.