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After more than 126,000 years, extinct steppe mammoth emerges to show off his giant tusks

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17 September 2015

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Scientists are delighted at the discovery of a virtually full skeleton preserved in permafrost. Picture: Academy of Sciences Republic of Sakha

It is the second major find of a steppe mammoth - the largest-ever elephant and trunked mammoth - in Russia this summer, and its tusks were each 2.5 metres in length, with the pair weighting 150 kilograms.

Scientists are delighted at the discovery of a virtually full skeleton preserved in permafrost; however, the ancient remains, believed to date from the Middle Pleistocene stage, do not include soft tissue. 

Yevgeny Maschenko, senior researcher of the Mammal Laboratory, Institute of Palaeontology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, said: 'The skeleton was buried in an anatomical position. Almost every bone was excavated - even small bones from the lower parts of all legs were there. The only missing part was right hind leg, which we think could have been torn during the mammoth's life time. 

'Some pelvis bones were gnawed by predators. We suppose that this was a very ancient animal that lived and died more than 100,000 years ago, and that it was partly frozen from the moment of the death.'

Steppe mammoth in Yakutia


Steppe mammoth in Yakutia

The steppe mammoth was discovered by a family from Nizhniy Bestyakh village, some 30 km away from Yakutsk. Picture: The Siberian Times

The soil and sand around it thawed and froze again, burying it once more, and cocooning the skeleton for many millennia. 'Then the soil thawed, and froze again, so the mammoth was re-buried in the soil and sand that it was found,' he said.

'It was a male steppe mammoth, aged approximately 45 years, not too big.  His skeleton is slightly over three metres. The mammoth has huge tusks, each of them about 18 cm in diameter, and each weighing 75 kilograms.' In length were originally around 2.5 metres. 

The animals were shorter in length but taller in height than the woolly mammoth, the remains of which are common in this part of Siberia, known as the Sakha Republic, or Yakutia, the coldest region in the Russian Federation. 

'Scientists believe they were taller than four metres, and could weigh nearly ten tons,' he said. 'They were only partly-covered with hair, as the climate then was warm and dry, so there was no need to adjust to lower temperatures. We must study the site with geologists. We have taken samples of soil and rocks.

Steppe mammoth in Yakutia


Steppe mammoth in Yakutia


Steppe mammoth in Yakutia


Steppe mammoth in Yakutia


Steppe mammoth in Yakutia

'The skeleton was buried in an anatomical position. Almost every bone was excavated - even small bones from the lower parts of all legs were there.' Picture: Academy of Sciences Republic of Sakha

'We also rinsed soil at the spot and found a lot of frozen seeds, plants, fruit and insects. This allows us to build a picture of what conditions this steppe mammoths lived in. It was also interesting to discover excrements of ground squirrel, deer, horse, rhinoceros and woolly mammoth right around the spot where the mammoth was found.'

Scientists will now seek to precisely date the find to see if it matches their theory that it dates to the mid-Pleistocene stage which lasted from 781,000 to 126,000 years ago.

Dr Albert Protopopov, head of the Department of Mammoth Fauna Studies, in Yakutsk, said: 'Unlike the late Pleistocene stage, the mid-Pleistocene hasn't been studied in such depth. There is an assumption that the climate was warm in Yakutia then. Yet the skeleton of the steppe mammoth was buried in permafrost alongside bones of animals, like a roe, which was believed to inhabit this area later. So how does this fit with the warm climate hypothesis? We are hoping to start more thorough research next year, perhaps involving a field camp.'

Scientists in Perm region this year also announced a find of a more or less full skeleton of a steppe mammoth. Around 50 bones were pulled out from a site, and the experts believe they will find the rest next summer in a new dig. 

Steppe mammoth

The Steppe Mammoth is an extinct species that ranged over most of northern Eurasia. The beast probably evolved in Siberia during the early Pleistocene from Mammuthus meridionalis. Picture: Eldar Zakirov

'It was rather a big male, with a body height of about four metres,' said Tatiana Vostrikova, head of the expedition and deputy director of Perm Museum of Local History. We have found parts of the tusks, occipital bones, hyoid bone fragments, a fragment of the right scapula, ribs, vertebrae, jaw, teeth and more.' 

The Steppe Mammoth is an extinct species that ranged over most of northern Eurasia. The beast probably evolved in Siberia during the early Pleistocene from Mammuthus meridionalis. It was the first stage in the evolution of the steppe and tundra elephants and an ancestor of the famed woolly mammoth of later glacial periods. Finds of skeletons are rare; more commonly, scientists have found  the single bones of teeth.

An almost complete skeleton of a steppe mammoth was discovered in 1996 in Kikinda, Serbia. Around 90% of its bone mass was preserved, but missing were this female's feet and scapulas. A male was found in 1990 in West Runton, eastern England, which was about 85% intact, missing the upper part of its skull. 

Comments (2)

Indeed, wonderful article, and an amazing find! I would love to read a follow-up on this too.
Jonathan, Encino, CA
01/10/2015 18:01
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Fascinating - such an exciting discovery with so much potential, regarding how our planet evolved. I hope there will be a follow-up article as things progress
Clare Rodgers, Don Tan, Thailand
24/09/2015 06:58
3
0
1

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