Airs Thursday, January 7, 2021
||| FROM CAROL KULMINSKI for ORCAS HISTORICAL MUSEUMS |||
The story may be familiar to some residents who remember the remarkable find of the Bison antiquus, the extinct giant bison, at a swamp and peat bog adjoining Obstruction State Park. In 2003, some workmen were digging a trench with a backhoe at this pond when they noticed large bones. Remarkably, the operators and drivers stopped work and excavated the site by hand, without tools, finding and collecting 98 bone elements and fragments, including some very small and delicate ones and a large skull.
With the property owners not present, the workers were unsure of what to do, so they stored the bones in a cardboard box, uncleaned and untouched for several years until they came to the attention of archaeologists. Now it has come to the attention of Mossback’s Northwest on PBS, Bison Hunters in the San Juans, (Season 2, Episode 1).
Some of the filming was done at the Ayer’s pond and some at the Orcas Island Historical Museum in Eastsound where the bones have become part of their permanent collection. The museum hopes to expand the Bison exhibit in order to tell the story of a time on Orcas 14,000 years ago. You can read more about this rare find here and if you would like to get more involved with this project at the museum, please email info@orcasmuseums.org.
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I was president of the Board of the Museum when we were approached about this find. It was a remarkable time and an unbelievable discovery. I was fortunate enough to be around and worked a bit with Michael Wilson of Simon Fraser University in British Columbia as we raised funds for the study of the bones. I believe he has published his findings by now but I have not read them. Hopefully this PBS special will present the truth about the bones and their finding.
There’s a much bigger story behind this discovery. It’s a small part of the growing body of evidence that the peopling of North America occurred via a migration along the west coast over 14,000 years ago, not through a gap in the Canadian ice sheet centuries later.