January 1, 2026

FacebookTwitterInstagram
  • Home
  • Teacher Features ’25
  • Columnists
    • Dallas Huston
    • Don Newbury
    • Diane Adams
    • Michael Bunker
    • Luke Clayton
    • Todd Howey
    • Katelyn Sims
    • Veterans Corner
    • Congressman August Pfluger
  • Real Estate
    • Open Houses
  • News
    • ’24 Area Guide
      • Area Guide Locations
      • ’23 Area Guide
      • 5 THINGS !
    • 2025 Youth Fair
      • 2024 Youth Fair
        • 2023 Youth Fair
        • Youth Fair 2022
    • Graduation 2025
      • Bangs
      • Blanket
      • Brookesmith
      • Brownwood
      • Coleman
      • Early
      • May
      • Premier High School
      • Zephyr
    • Rodeo 2025
      • ’24 Rodeo
    • Events
      • Add an Event
      • Celebrations
      • Submit a Celebration
    • Crime
    • Agriculture and Farming
    • Public Notices
    • Business
    • Trending
    • City of Early News
    • Classifieds
    • Outdoors
    • Statewide news
    • Announcements
    • Local News Feed
    • Teacher Features
    • Veteran Svcs
  • Obituaries
    • Submit an Obituary
  • Biz Directory
  • Jobs
    • Post a Job
    • Employer Login
    • Search Jobs
  • Sports
    • High School Football
  • Search
MENU
  • Home
  • Teacher Features ’25
  • Columnists
    • Dallas Huston
    • Don Newbury
    • Diane Adams
    • Michael Bunker
    • Luke Clayton
    • Todd Howey
    • Katelyn Sims
    • Veterans Corner
    • Congressman August Pfluger
  • Real Estate
    • Open Houses
  • News
    • ’24 Area Guide
      • Area Guide Locations
      • ’23 Area Guide
      • 5 THINGS !
    • 2025 Youth Fair
      • 2024 Youth Fair
        • 2023 Youth Fair
        • Youth Fair 2022
    • Graduation 2025
      • Bangs
      • Blanket
      • Brookesmith
      • Brownwood
      • Coleman
      • Early
      • May
      • Premier High School
      • Zephyr
    • Rodeo 2025
      • ’24 Rodeo
    • Events
      • Add an Event
      • Celebrations
      • Submit a Celebration
    • Crime
    • Agriculture and Farming
    • Public Notices
    • Business
    • Trending
    • City of Early News
    • Classifieds
    • Outdoors
    • Statewide news
    • Announcements
    • Local News Feed
    • Teacher Features
    • Veteran Svcs
  • Obituaries
    • Submit an Obituary
  • Biz Directory
  • Jobs
    • Post a Job
    • Employer Login
    • Search Jobs
  • Sports
    • High School Football
  • Search

Archaeology Day at the Brown County Museum of History to be held October 17th

October 6, 2015 at 9:15 pm brownwoodnewsstaff
  • Life
  • Tweet
  • Share
  • Reddit
  • +1
  • Pocket
  • LinkedIn

DayOfArchaelogyLogoThe Brown County Museum of History invites the public to visit the partial bones exhibit during the Texas Historical Commission’s  Day of Archaeology on Saturday, October 17th from 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.

Mastodons may have lived in Brown County, according to Dr. T.R. Havins, former science professor Howard Payne University. An excerpt from The Live and Lives of Brown County People– Book #19 by Brown County Historical Society and another excerpt from the Howard Payne University Yellow Jacket (Brownwood, Tx,) Vol. 88, No. 7 Ed.1 stated the following:

Dr. Havins identified the bones and was thrilled to be part of such an important find in December 1951. “Geologists believe this type of animal lived in this region some thirty or thirty-five thousand years ago. At that time this area was probably a swampy area near Pecan Bayou. The tendency that dying elephants would seek a water source indicated that the area had an attraction for the Mastodons” Dr Havins stated.

It was determined judging by the Mastodon’s bones, it must have been twelve or fourteen feet tall. A Mastodon, a mammoth, was a giant, hairy elephant-like creature.

Local folklore holds that on two different occasions, dinosaur-type bones were found during the construction of the Walker Library and the Winebrenner science building. Supposedly, while the foundation of Winebrenner was being built, another group of large Mastodon bones were found, only to be crushed in the night by vandals.

The bones could not be those of a dinosaur, Professor Winebrenner stated at the time, since the geological formation of which they were imbedded is geological ages removed from those in which dinosaurs lived. The dinosaurs predated the age in which mammoth roamed the Texas landscape.

The public is encouraged to visit the partial bones at  the Kids Zone area of the Educational Center of the Brown County Museum of History during the Texas Historical Commission’s  Archaeology Day- October 17, 2015.   The museum is located at 209 N. Broadway which is across the street from The Brownwood Museum, often called the “Old Jail.”

During the event, there will be crafts to do and refreshments. Museum hours are Thursday and Friday 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. and Saturdays 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.  For more information call (325) 641-1926.

Tags: BrownwoodNews, Bulletin, news, October 7th from 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. Brownwood, texas, The Brown County Museum of History invites the public to visit the partial bones exhibit during the Texas Historical Commission’s Archaeology Day on Saturday
Previous Story
Ranger College Enrollment Numbers Increase
Next Story
Law Enforcement Blotter 10/6

Facebook

Brownwood News
  • Contact Us
  • Veteran Services
  • Advertising
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy

Social

Facebook Facebook Twitter Twitter Instagram Instagram
Brownwood News © 2026 Powered by OneCMS™ | Served by InterTech Media LLC
Are you still listening?
Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; [email protected]) X-Middleton/1
26a85e6bf4a02bc57f02cfe660fb3e62ba54fbc0
1
Loading...