A full-body mold of a
Diceratherium exists as an impression in a cliff on the shore of
Blue Lake near
Coulee City, Washington. The impression is a lava cast that is thought to be of a mature individual that died in a shallow lake and was rapidly buried by a
basalt flow during the mid-
Miocene (about 15 million years ago), creating a three-dimensional mold of its body. The mold formed a rhinoceros-shaped cave on exposed rocks belonging to the
Columbia River Basalt Group, which was first discovered by two
Seattle couples searching for
petrified wood in 1935, who also discovered remnant bones of the animal. A replica of the "rhinoceros cave" was created by researchers from the
University of California Museum of Paleontology in 1948 and later donated to the
Burke Museum, where it is on display. ==References==