Scientist finds fossil evidence of sabre-toothed cat in southern Alberta
MEDICINE HAT, Alta. — Scientists have found fossil evidence from the last ice age of a sabre-toothed cat in southern Alberta — the northern-most record of the predator.
A study by the Royal Ontario Museum and the University Toronto was published Friday in the Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences.
“We were describing the different cat fossils that were found in the Medicine Hat area in Pleistocene deposits,” said Ashley Reynolds, a graduate student at the Royal Ontario Museum who led the study as part of her PhD at the University of Toronto.
“We found potentially four different species, (including) the Smilodon fatalis, which is the famous sabre-toothed cat.”