Wilbur Locality
Basic information
Sample name: Wilbur Locality

Sample aka: SDSM Locality V8910; UWBM Locality C0163

Reference: J. E. Martin and V. S. Mallory. 2011. Vertebrate paleontology of the late Miocene (Hemphillian) Wilbur Locality of central Washington. Paludicola 8(3):155-185 [ER 4171]
Geography
Country: United States

State: Washington


County: Yakima


Coordinate: 46.65° N, -120.56° W
Coordinate basis: estimated from map

Scale: quarry

Formation: Ellensburg

Time interval: Late Miocene

Zone: Hemphillian

Ma: 7.41

Age basis: K-Ar

Geography comments: "along Maple Way, west of the town of Selah" (coordinate estimated using Google Maps)
"a radiometric date of 7.41 ± 0.36 Ma was derived" from the fossiliferous diatomite (method is K-Ar according to Smith et al. 1989, Isochron/West)

Environment
Lithology: not described

Taphonomic context: fluvial deposit

Habitat comments: "A dazzling white diatomite lens" that is "1.5-meter thick" and includes "reworked tephra and some mudclast breccia"
"The fossils were found at all levels within the diatomite"
"most skeletons are not articulated, but some appear associated (e.g. camelids), indicating postmortem fluvial reworking"
one turtle shell and one skull are present in addition to jaws, teeth, and postcrania

Methods
Life forms: carnivores,rodents,ungulates,other small mammals,snakes,turtles

Sampling methods: screenwash

Sample size: 63 specimens

Museum: South Dakota School of Mines; University of Washington Burke Museum

Sampling comments: "discovered in the late 1970s by Mr. Scott Wilbur" with "subsequent excavations"
"Typical screen-washing techniques resulted in recovery of larger bones and fragments but few microvertebrates"

Metadata
Sample number: 4631

Contributor: John Alroy

Enterer: John Alroy

Created: 2025-01-03 01:22:44

Modified: 2025-01-03 01:22:44

Abundance distribution
18 species
6 singletons
total count 63
geometric series index: 39.6
Fisher's α: 8.419
geometric series k: 0.8733
Hurlbert's PIE: 0.8978
Shannon's H: 2.5397
Good's u: 0.9073
Each square represents a species. Square sizes are proportional to counts.
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