“…Mastodon remains are typically associated with relatively wet, forested regions, such as that present in the Great Lakes region during the terminal Pleistocene (Dreimanis, , ; McAndrews and Jackson, ; Haynes, ; Saunders, ; Newsom and Mihlbachler, ; Yansa and Adams, ). Studies of mastodon tooth enamel isotopic compositions, microwear and gut/faecal contents support a browsing adaptation (Lepper et al ., ; MacFadden and Cerling, ; Koch et al ., ; Green et al ., ; Newsom and Mihlbachler, ), although mastodon diets did include some grasses (Koch et al ., ; Gobetz and Bozarth, ) and mastodons were able to adapt to significant temporal changes in vegetation within the Great Lakes region (Metcalfe and Longstaffe, ). Woolly mammoths ( Mammuthus primigenius ) were associated with open steppe–tundra environments (Haynes, ; Guthrie, ) and their southern cousins, the Columbian mammoths ( Mammuthus columbi ), were most common in temperate grasslands (Agenbroad, ).…”