What’s going on out on the land?

How To Age A White-tailed Deer by Looking At The Teeth pt. 2 : Older Deer
mammals, bones, dead stuff byron murray mammals, bones, dead stuff byron murray

How To Age A White-tailed Deer by Looking At The Teeth pt. 2 : Older Deer

At the end of April I was attending a Track and Sign Evaluation. On the second day of the two day eval we came across a female White-tailed Deer carcass and were asked the question of how old the dead Deer was when she died. We were given three options to choose from based on what we could see. The three options were: A) 1-3 years, B) 4-7 years, or C) 7 and up.
Well, when I got home I started I realized I had a lot more research to do.

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How To Age A White-tailed Deer by Looking At The Teeth, pt. 1 : Younger Deer
mammals, bones, dead stuff byron murray mammals, bones, dead stuff byron murray

How To Age A White-tailed Deer by Looking At The Teeth, pt. 1 : Younger Deer

A lot has been studied and written about on the topic of White-tailed Deer. But despite reading a ton of it, I still find it trying to find all the various pieces of information and put it all together, unless I write it up myself. Here is my attempt to consolidate and better understand how we can come to know a deer’s age at the time of their death by looking at the teeth which remain.

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A mystery while tracking in Lake of Bays, 2022.08.13
mammals, Summer, tracking, skulls, bones, dead stuff byron murray mammals, Summer, tracking, skulls, bones, dead stuff byron murray

A mystery while tracking in Lake of Bays, 2022.08.13

The skill set of identifying a fresh trail with certainty in the jumbled quilt of the Summer forest floor is definitely an art and science with which I have little purchase… but a skill set that I do feel a growing confidence about is bone identification, and while making our way up the hill in the leaf little there was a small mandible laying fairly exposed with the lingual surface (the side which would be closest to the tongue in the living animal) facing the canopy.

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