Cabin Radio: Ancient antlers show caribou calving grounds persist over millennia

UC study finds caribou have been using same Arctic areas to raise babies for 3,000 years

Cabin Radio in Canada's Northwest Territories highlighted a study by the University of Cincinnati that found caribou have been using the same Arctic calving grounds for at least 3,000 years.

UC College of Arts and Sciences paleoecologist Joshua Miller was lead author of a study published in the journal Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution that examined antlers shed by female caribou in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

Joshua Miller, PhD, with caribou antlers and environmental portrait outside of the geology building.

UC Assistant Professor of Geology Joshua Miller found that shed caribou antlers in the Arctic leave a record of historic calving grounds dating back thousands of years. Photo/Colleen Kelley/UC Marketing + Brand

Miller has been leading summer expeditions to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge since 2010, using rafts to navigate remote rivers to search for caribou antlers exposed on the tundra.

Female caribou shed their antlers within days of giving birth, leaving behind a record of their annual travels across Alaska and Canada’s Ivvavik National Park that persists on the cold tundra for hundreds or even thousands of years. Miller and his collaborators with the University of Alaska and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service recovered antlers that have sat undisturbed on the arctic tundra since the Bronze Age.

The study demonstrates how important the area is for an animal that native Alaskans and Canadians still depend on for sustenance, even as energy companies seek to exploit oil and gas resources in this protected area.

Female caribou shed their antlers within days of giving birth, leaving behind a record of their annual travels across Alaska and Canada’s Yukon that persists on the cold tundra for hundreds or even thousands of years. Researchers recovered antlers that have sat undisturbed on the arctic tundra since the Bronze Age.

“It still blows my mind that you can just walk across tundra and there are these ancient echoes of this past population,” Miller told Cabin Radio.

Read the Cabin Radio story.

Featured image at top: UC assistant professor Joshua Miller uses shed antlers to track the annual migration of caribou. Photo/Lucian Provines

More UC geology in the news

Related Stories

1

Sugar overload killing hearts

November 10, 2025

Two in five people will be told they have diabetes during their lifetime. And people who have diabetes are twice as likely to develop heart disease. One of the deadliest dangers? Diabetic cardiomyopathy. But groundbreaking University of Cincinnati research hopes to stop and even reverse the damage before it’s too late.

2

Is going nuclear the solution to Ohio’s energy costs?

November 10, 2025

The Ohio Capital Journal recently reported that as energy prices continue to climb, economists are weighing the benefits of going nuclear to curb costs. The publication dove into a Scioto Analysis survey of 18 economists to weigh the pros and cons of nuclear energy. One economist featured was Iryna Topolyan, PhD, professor of economics at the Carl H. Lindner College of Business.

3

App turns smartwatch into detector of structural heart disease

November 10, 2025

An app that uses an AI model to read a single-lead ECG from a smartwatch can detect structural heart disease, researchers reported at the 2025 Scientific Sessions of the American Heart Association. Although the technology requires further validation, researchers said it could help improve the identification of patients with heart failure, valvular conditions and left ventricular hypertrophy before they become symptomatic, which could improve the prognosis for people with these conditions.