The stable carbon isotope ratios of tooth enamel from 89 herbivores from the Dove Spring Formation (DSF) of the El Paso Basin, western Mojave Desert, California were analyzed to determine if C 4 plants may have present in the late Miocene of southern California. Taxa analyzed include antilocaprids, castorids, camelids, equids, gomphotheriids, merycoidodontids, and rhinocerotids. The atmospheric CO 2-δ 13 C value has varied significantly in the geologic past, leading to changes in the δ 13 C values of plants and tooth enamel. The estimated δ 13 C value of atmospheric CO 2 in the middle to late Miocene is-5.8 ± 0.2 ‰, making the pure C 3 diet cutoff value higher than the modern by ~2 ‰. Given this, much of the evidence of an early spread of C 4 , which inappropriately uses the modern C 3 diet cutoff value, may be a false signal from waterstressed C 3 plants and the amount of C 4 biomass in the geologic past may have been overestimated. The enamel-δ 13 C values of all taxa sampled are-10.1 ± 1.1 ‰ (n=89). Accounting for the changes in the δ 13 C values of atmospheric CO 2 , enamel-δ 13 C values from the DSF indicate that herbivores from that area had C 3 diets and lived in an environment dominated by C 3 plants.