Woolly mammoth skeleton found in lake in Russia's Arctic
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[July 29, 2020]
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian
scientists are poring over the stunningly well-preserved bones of an
adult woolly mammoth that roamed the earth at least 10,000 years ago,
after local inhabitants discovered its remains in the shallows of a
north Siberian lake.
Part of its skull, several ribs and foreleg bones, some with soft tissue
still attached to them, were retrieved from Russia's remote Yamal
peninsula above the Arctic circle on July 23. Scientists are still
searching the site for other bones.
Similar finds in Russia's vast Siberian region have happened with
increasing regularity as climate change warming the Arctic at a faster
pace than the rest of the world has thawed the ground in some areas long
locked in permafrost.
Scientists circulated images in December of a prehistoric puppy, thought
to be 18,000 years old, that was found in the permafrost region of
Russia's Far East in 2018.
The mammoth remains are at least 10,000 years old, although researchers
don't yet know exactly when it walked the earth or how old it was when
it died, said Dmitry Frolov, director of the Scientific Centre for
Arctic studies.
Researchers have found mammoth fossils dating from up to 30,000 years
ago in Russia, he said.
Yevgeniya Khozyainova, a scientist from a local museum, said it was
unusual to find so many bones belonging to a single species and to know
where they came from.
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Specialists discover mammoth bones along the shore of Pechevalavato
Lake in the Yamalo-Nenets autonomous district, Russia July 22, 2020.
Government of Yamalo-Nenets District/Handout via REUTERS
"Of course, we'd like to find the remaining parts, to understand how
complete a find it is. Whenever there is soft tissue left behind, it
is valuable material to study," she said.
(Reporting by Dmitriy Turlyun; Writing by Tom Balmforth; Editing by
Raissa Kasolowsky)
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