Tag Archives: mammoth

SAMMY HAGAR And WOLFGANG VAN HALEN’s MAMMOTH WVH To Share Stage At Tonight’s ‘Person Of The Year’ Gala Honoring JON BON JOVI – BLABBERMOUTH.NET

  1. SAMMY HAGAR And WOLFGANG VAN HALEN’s MAMMOTH WVH To Share Stage At Tonight’s ‘Person Of The Year’ Gala Honoring JON BON JOVI BLABBERMOUTH.NET
  2. Bon Jovi On The Future of The Band, What To Expect From ‘Thank You, Goodnight’ Documentary & More | MusiCares Person of the Year 2024 Billboard
  3. Katharine McPhee, 39, looks VERY glam in a busty jeweled dress next to husband David Foster, 74, as they suppo Daily Mail
  4. Jon Bon Jovi Talks Giving Back, 40 Years of Bon Jovi & His Pollstar Live! Keynote Q&A Pollstar
  5. Sammy Hagar & Mammoth WVH To Perform At MusiCares Event Van Halen News Desk

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Scientists Are Reincarnating the Woolly Mammoth to Return in 4 Years

Scientists Reincarnating the Woolly MammothTheCrimsonMonkey – Getty Images

  • Colossal recently added $60 million in funding to move toward a 2027 de-extinction of the woolly mammoth.

  • The Dallas-based company is now working to edit the genes for the reincarnation of the mammal.

  • Colossal planned to reintroduce the woolly mammoth into Russia, but that may shift.

The long-dead woolly mammoth will make its return from extinction by 2027, says Colossal, the biotech company actively working to reincarnate the ancient beast.

Last year, the Dallas-based firm scored an additional $60 million in funding to continue the, well, mammoth gene-editing work it started in 2021. If successful, not only will Colossal bring back an extinct species—one the company dubs a cold-resistant elephant—but it will also reintroduce the woolly mammoth to the same ecosystem in which it once lived in an effort to fight climate change, according to a recent Medium post.

Colossal calls the woolly mammoth’s vast migration patterns an active part of preserving the health of the Arctic, and so bringing the animal back to life can have a beneficial impact on the health of the world’s ecosystem. While Colossal originally hoped to reintroduce the woolly mammoth into Siberia, the company may explore other options based on the current political framework of the world.

The woolly mammoth’s DNA is a 99.6 percent match of the Asian elephant, which leads Colossal to believe it’s well on its way toward achieving its goal. “In the minds of many, this creature is gone forever,” the company says. “But not in the minds of our scientists, nor the labs of our company. We’re already in the process of the de-extinction of the Woolly Mammoth. Our teams have collected viable DNA samples and are editing the genes that will allow this wonderful megafauna to once again thunder through the Arctic.”

Through gene editing, Colossal scientists will eventually create an embryo of a woolly mammoth. They will place the embryo in an African elephant to take advantage of its size and allow it to give birth to the new woolly mammoth. The eventual goal is to then repopulate parts of the Arctic with the new woolly mammoth and strengthen local plant life with the migration patterns and dietary habits of the beast.

If Colossal proves successful on reincarnating the woolly mammoth—ditto the thylacine, also known as the Tasmanian tiger—expect a variety of new ethical questions to arise on how to handle the creature and potential reintroduction issues.

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Could a zombie virus frozen in mammoth remains leak from a Russian lab and spark a new pandemic?

The majestic creature had lain silently in the permafrost for more than a million years. But all it took was a curious scientist, tinkering with its long-dead body, to unleash a terrible new pandemic on the world.

No, it’s not the plot of a woolly mammoth sequel to Jurassic Park, nor another theory on the origins of Covid-19 — though the result of this scientific investigation could be horribly similar.

It’s the story of how, right now, Russian researchers are unearthing the bodies of long-dead mammals in an attempt to ‘reawaken’ Stone Age viruses.

Such viruses are thought to have remained dormant for millennia in the frozen remains of mammoths, woolly rhinoceros and other extinct species in northeast Siberia.

Russian researchers are unearthing the bodies of long-dead mammals in an attempt to ‘reawaken’ Stone Age viruses

Like the virus that caused Covid-19, these prehistoric ‘paleoviruses’ are unfamiliar to the human body and, were they ever to find their way across the species barrier, catastrophe could follow. We would, after all, have no natural defence.

The woolly mammoths that roamed the Siberian steppes — until the last one died some 10,000 years ago — were fearsome creatures. The size of an elephant, they had sharp tusks that could spear a human unwise enough to get near.

For biologists, they seem to hold an enduring fascination. Last year, a project called Colossal was launched, aiming to tweak the genetic code of the mammoth’s closest living relative, the Asian elephant, to create a hybrid animal that could survive in the Arctic Circle.

This latest project — carried out by Russia’s State Research Centre of Virology and Biotechnology, known as Vector — aims to extract cellular material containing the viruses that killed these frozen beasts, and take it back to the lab for experimentation.

What could possibly go wrong? To conjure up the all-too-real nightmare scenario, you only have to hear the history of Vector.

The idea of Russian scientists meddling with long-dormant mammal-infecting viruses has caused alarm among international experts

One of the research centre’s branches is a former biological weapons facility which, in April 1979, during the Soviet era, accidentally released spores of deadly anthrax bacteria. The resulting anthrax outbreak killed at least 66 people, though Soviet authorities denied for years that the incident had happened.

Today, Vector hosts one of the 59 maximum security biolabs around the world (another is China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology, widely suspected of inadvertently unleashing Covid-19).

Vector’s track record of lethal mishaps also includes an incident in 2004 when a researcher died after pricking herself accidentally with a needle carrying the Ebola virus.

The idea of Russian scientists meddling with long-dormant mammal-infecting viruses has caused alarm among international experts such as Jean-Michel Claverie, a professor of microbiology at the University of Aix-Marseille in France.

Last month, Claverie revealed that his team had itself revived a Siberian ‘zombie’ virus. This had lain frozen under a lake bed for almost 50,000 years.

But in Claverie’s case — for safety’s sake, he insists — his work is focused solely on viruses that can infect only single-celled amoeba, rather than threatening animals or, indeed, humans.

‘[Vector’s research] is terrible. I’m totally against it,’ he says. ‘[It] is very, very risky. Our immune systems have never encountered these type of viruses. Some of them could be 200,000 or even 400,000 years old. But ancient viruses that infected animals or humans could still be infectious.’

Vector, State Research Center of Virology and Biotechnology outside of Novosibirsk

As for trusting Vector’s biosecurity, Claverie says: ‘I would not be very confident that everything is up to date.’

Even if the Russians could be trusted not to let loose a virus, we have other reasons to fear that something nasty will come for us from the Arctic’s frozen wastes.

This is because the permafrost — vast swathes of permanently frozen ground — is no longer permanent. Thanks to global warming it is melting, and from it may emerge deadly old infectious foes. And this really isn’t science fiction: it has happened already.

Eight years ago, Russia’s far north experienced abnormally mild summer temperatures.

Soon afterwards, 72 people from a community of nomadic reindeer herders, including 41 children, were hospitalised with infections.

The culprit was, again, anthrax. Though this time, not from a Russian bioweapons lab, but from human and animal remains buried in the thawing permafrost.

A 12-year-old boy died. ‘We literally fought for the life of each person, but the infection showed its cunning,’ said the governor of the affected Yamal area, Dmitry Kobylkin. Anthrax disease, which is known locally as Siberian plague, had not been seen in the region since 1941.

But average temperatures have increased by up to 1c in northern Russia over the past 15 years. And the warmer climate is now thawing the permafrost that covers much of the country, including cemeteries and animal burial grounds.

The floodwaters produced by the thawing permafrost also erode river banks where nomads bury their dead. It is from such cadavers that the zombie anthrax spores are awakening.

Anthrax spores can survive in frozen human and animal remains for hundreds of years, waiting to be released, according to Alexey Kokorin, head of the climate and energy programme for the World Wildlife Fund in Russia.

Viruses from these remains can then infect the groundwater that people drink. Indeed, the Siberian boy who died in 2014 had an intestinal form of the disease, which first causes fever, stomach pains, diarrhoea and vomiting.

What other deadly contagions might be lying in wait for us?

In 2005, Nasa revived bacteria that had been locked in Alaskan permafrost for more than 12,000 years. Other scientists have recovered genetic material from diseases such as smallpox, the 1918 Spanish flu and even the bubonic plague. In fact, human remains exhumed from frozen ground in Alaska in 1997 have yielded the complete genome of the 1918 H1N1 influenza virus that killed tens of millions.

Anthrax spores can survive in frozen human and animal remains for hundreds of years, waiting to be released, according to Alexey Kokorin

Two years ago, a workshop that convened global experts from organisations such as the European Academies’ Science Advisory Council warned that, ‘permafrost may harbour infectious viruses or bacteria that have been dormant for thousands or even millions of years, for which local populations lack immunity and no countermeasures exist’.

Some scientists hope these viruses and bacteria will not have been able to survive being frozen for many centuries because they originally evolved to thrive inside warm bodies.

However, this international workshop warned there remains a real danger of globally lethal pandemic outbreaks that are ‘low-probability, but high-consequence’.

Beyond global warming, the biggest risk of a ‘defrosted pandemic’ comes from open-cast mining.

In Siberia, the frozen ground is increasingly being exploited for fossil fuels, with open-cast coal mines frequently dug close to human settlements. This form of mining entails removing layers of permafrost that can be hundreds of thousands of years old.

Professor Claverie, the French microbiologist, says it may create another level of risk, as it is being done in the open rather than in a secure bio-lab. ‘You don’t know what is there,’ Claverie warns.

Scientists at the U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine held a special meeting in 2019 to explore the threat of lethal microbes emerging from our planet’s melting ice.

They concluded that the world needed increased disease surveillance in the Arctic to spot any outbreaks as quickly as possible, in order to be able to develop defences or cures in time to save millions.

Indeed, as Claverie’s team reports in a yet-to-be-published study, the biggest risk of all is from unknown viruses that may, just like Covid‑19, spread rapidly through a population that lacks natural immunity, triggering a pandemic.

Our best hope would be to develop vaccines in double-quick time. The lesson from Covid-19 is that we need international cooperation in order to decode the new threat’s genes and produce rapid counter-measures.

However, such cooperation between Western and Russian scientists has itself been largely put on ice — in the wake of Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

If ever there were a bad time to be meddling with frozen Russian mammoths, it is surely now.

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Mammoth bones show evidence of North America’s early humans

The roughly 37,000-year-old remains of a female mammoth and her calf show distinct signs of butchering, providing new evidence that humans may have arrived in North America much earlier than believed.

Paleontologist Timothy Rowe first learned of the fossils in 2013 when a neighbor noticed something sticking out of a hillside on some New Mexico property belonging to Rowe.

Upon closer inspection, Rowe found a tusk, a bashed-in mammoth skull and other bones that looked deliberately broken. He believed it was the site where two mammoths had been butchered.

“What we’ve got is amazing,” Rowe said in a statement. “It’s not a charismatic site with a beautiful skeleton laid out on its side. It’s all busted up. But that’s what the story is.”

Rowe, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin’s Jackson School of Geosciences, is an expert in vertebrate paleontology and doesn’t typically study mammoths or early humans. But he couldn’t help but work on the research due to the discovery’s location.

Two six-week excavations took place at the site in 2015 and 2016, but analysis in the lab has taken much longer and remains ongoing, Rowe said. He is the lead author of a new study providing an analysis of the site and its implications, which published in the journal Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution in July.

“I have yet to fully process the cosmic coincidence of this site appearing in my back yard,” Rowe wrote in an email.

Analyzing the site

Multiple finds at the site paint a portrait of what took place there thousands of years ago, including bone tools, evidence of a fire, bones bearing fractures and other signs of animal butchering by humans.

Long mammoth bones shaped into disposable blades were used to break down the animal carcasses before a fire helped melt down their fat.

Fractures created by blunt force can be seen in the bones, according to the study. No stone tools were at the site, but researchers found flake knives made from bones with worn edges.

A chemical analysis of the sediment around the mammoth bones showed that the fire was sustained and controlled rather than caused by a wildfire or lightning strike. There was also evidence of bone that had been pulverized as well as burned small animal remains, including birds, fish, rodents and lizards.

The research team used CT scans to analyze the bones from the site, finding puncture wounds that would have been used to drain fat from ribs and vertebrae. The humans who butchered the mammoths were thorough, Rowe said.

“I have excavated dinosaurs that were scavenged, but the pattern of bone disarticulation and breakage from human butchering was unlike anything I had seen,” Rowe said.

The most surprising detail about the site is that it’s in New Mexico — and previous evidence has suggested that humans weren’t there until tens of thousands of years later.

Retracing early human steps

Collagen taken from the mammoth bones helped the researchers determine that the animals were butchered at the site between 36,250 and 38,900 years ago. This age range makes the New Mexico site one of the oldest that ancient humans created in North America, researchers said.

Scientists have debated for years when early humans first arrived in North America.

The 16,000-year-old Clovis culture is known because of the stone tools it left behind. But an increasing amount of evidence suggests that older North American sites were home to a pre-Clovis population that had a different genetic lineage. The older sites have a different kind of evidence, such as preserved footprints, bone tools or animal bones bearing cut marks older than 16,000 years ago.

“Humans have been in the Americas for more than twice as long as archaeologists have maintained for many years,” Rowe said. “This site indicates that humans attained a global distribution far earlier than previously understood.”

The position of the site, which is well within North America’s western interior, suggests that the first humans arrived well before 37,000 years ago, according to the study. These early humans likely traveled over land or along coastal routes.

Rowe said he wants to sample the site to look for signs of ancient DNA next.

“Tim has done excellent and thorough work that represents frontier research,” retired Texas State University professor Mike Collins said in a release. “It’s forging a path that others can learn from and follow.”

Collins was not involved with the study. He led research at the Gault archaeological site, which contains both Clovis and pre-Clovis artifacts, near Austin, Texas.

“I think the deeper meaning of early human attainment of a global distribution is an important new question to explore,” Rowe said. “Our new techniques provided nuanced evidence of a human presence in the archaeological record, and I suspect that there are other sites of comparable age or even older that have gone unrecognized.”

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Credit Suisse chairman denies plans to sell or raise capital after mammoth loss

Speculation has emerged in recent months that Credit Suisse may be considering a capital raise.

Thi My Lien Nguyen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Credit Suisse Chairman Axel Lehmann denied any intention to sell or merge the embattled Swiss lender after it reported a massive second-quarter loss.

The bank posted a net loss of 1.593 billion Swiss francs ($1.66 billion) on Wednesday and announced the immediate resignation of CEO Thomas Gottstein, who will be replaced by asset management CEO Ulrich Koerner.

Credit Suisse vowed to ramp up its efforts to overhaul the group’s structure in the wake of mounting losses and a string of scandals — most notably the Archegos hedge fund collapse — that have resulted in substantial litigation costs.

Speculation has emerged in recent months that Credit Suisse may be considering a capital raise and even a possible sale of the company, but Lehmann told CNBC’s Geoff Cutmore Wednesday that neither was in the cards.

“On capital, we reported, despite the loss today, a CET1 ratio of 13.5%. I am happy to see that number and we will guide the market also, in light of the uncertainty, that we are certainly going to defend our CET1 ratio until the end of the year, between 13 and 14%,” Lehmann said. CET 1, or common equity tier one capital, ratio is a measure of a bank’s solvency.

“So I think we are good on that one, and we will manage that very, very tightly.”

He also branded some of the speculation — such as the suggestion in a Swiss blog early last month that U.S. bank State Street could be readying a takeover bid for Credit Suisse — as “quite ridiculous.”

Asked if he had any plans to sell the company or merge with another bank, Lehmann said “that is a clear no.”

Credit Suisse has launched a strategic review as it looks to cut costs, redirect its wealth and asset management operations and overhaul its compliance and risk management functions. 

In Wednesday’s earnings report, the bank said it will provide further details on the progress of the review in the third quarter.

“We will be even more focused going forward on our wealth management franchise, multi-specialist asset manager and the very, very strong Swiss business,” Lehmann said.

“We will have a highly competitive banking business and we will align the markets business better to serve the needs of our wealth management and Swiss clients.”

He added that the board wishes to bring down its absolute cost base to less than 15.5 billion Swiss francs in the medium term.

However, Lehmann refused to be drawn on how many job losses this will entail, instead promising more detailed plans for the cost-cutting strategy in the third-quarter earnings.

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200,000-year-old ‘mammoth graveyard’ found in UK

Researchers have unearthed a mammoth “graveyard” filled with the bony remains of five individuals — an infant, two juveniles and two adults — that died during the last ice age at what is now a quarry in Swindon, a town in southwest England.

Alongside the mammoth remains, researchers discovered stone tools crafted by Neanderthals, including a hand ax and small flint tools known as scrapers, which were used to clean fresh animal hides, according to DigVentures, the crowdsourced archaeological outfit in the U.K. that led the excavation. However, the team has yet to analyze the mammoth bones to determine whether they have Neanderthal tool marks on them.

“Finding mammoth bones is always extraordinary, but finding ones that are so old and well preserved, and in such close proximity to Neanderthal stone tools is exceptional,” Lisa Westcott Wilkins, the co-founder of DigVentures, said in a statement.

Related: Photos: See the Ancient Faces of a Man-Bun Wearing Bloke and a Neanderthal woman

Two amateur fossil hunters, Sally and Neville Hollingworth, discovered the graveyard and Neanderthal tools. Soon after, DigVentures organized two field seasons in 2019 and 2020 to excavate the site. The archaeologist-led work uncovered more ice age remnants, including delicate beetle wings, fragile freshwater snail shells and mammoth remains, such as tusks, leg bones, ribs and vertebrae belonging to a species of Steppe mammoth, a group whose descendants include the woolly mammoth. Although early Steppe mammoths stood up to 13.1 feet (4 meters) high at the shoulders, the five mammoth individuals at the graveyard were small, an indication that the species might have shrunk during an especially cold spell during the ice age, according to DigVentures.

Researchers dated the site to between 220,000 and 210,000 years ago, toward the end of an interglacial, or warm period, when Neanderthals still lived in Britain. Once temperatures dropped, however, the Neanderthals moved farther south.

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An archaeologist excavates a mammoth tusk. (Image credit: DigVentures)
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A mammoth tusk undergoing conservation to prevent deterioriation. (Image credit: DigVentures)
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A mammoth tooth from the site. (Image credit: DigVentures)
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A photo of a tusk before excavation. (Image credit: DigVentures)
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An archaeologist excavates a mammoth tibia, or leg bone. (Image credit: DigVentures)
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A mammoth bone at the site. (Image credit: DigVentures)
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Based on the bones discovered, the mammoth “graveyard” had at least five individuals. (Image credit: DigVentures)
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A Neanderthal hand ax found at the site. (Image credit: Sally Hollingworth and DigVentures)

Going forward, the team plans to figure out why so many mammoths died at one spot and whether Neanderthals hunted the beasts or scavenged their remains. Some previously found prehistoric evidence suggests Neanderthals stalked mammoths and other large pachyderms. For instance, Neanderthal footprints were found at a 100,000-year-old “nursery” for straight-tusked elephants (Palaeoloxodon antiquus) in southern Spain, Live Science previously reported

The new graveyard findings are described in the new BBC documentary “Attenborough and the Mammoth Graveyard,” with Sir David Attenborough and Ben Garrod, an evolutionary biologist at the University of East Anglia in the United Kingdom, who joined DigVentures on site to film the excavations. The show airs at 8 p.m. GMT on Dec. 30 on BBC One.

“The findings have enormous value for understanding the human occupation of Britain, and the delicate environmental evidence recovered will also help us understand it in the context of past climate change,” Duncan Wilson, the chief executive of Historic England, a British historical preservation body, said in a statement. “Through these finds and the research that will follow, we look forward to further light being shed on life in Britain 200,000 years ago.”

The work was funded by Historic England and supported by Keith Wilkinson of ARCA at the University of Winchester, the site’s landowners Hills Group Quarry Products and a wider specialist team from several U.K. research institutions.

Originally published on Live Science.

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‘Mammoth graveyard’ containing rare skeletons discovered — RT UK News

Archaeologists have unearthed the “near-pristine” remains of five Ice Age mammoths while excavating a newly discovered 200,000-year-old graveyard in the UK. Tools perhaps used by Neanderthals to hunt the animals were also found.

The remains, including those of two adults, two juveniles, and an infant, belong to a species of Steppe mammoth, an ancestor of the Woolly mammoth. More bones are expected to be uncovered as digging continues at the vast site, a gravel quarry in the Cotswolds area near the town of Swindon.

Researchers estimate the mammoth remains and stone tools to be around 220,000 years old. The site is thought to have once been a fertile plain to which both animals and Neanderthals were drawn as temperatures fell.

Ranking the find among the “most important discoveries in British palaeontology,” evolutionary biologist Ben Garrod told The Observer that finding such well-preserved skeletons was “incredibly rare.” He said the Steppe mammoths were the largest of the species, once weighing as much as 15 tons – about two to three times the weight of an African elephant.

It’s a glimpse back in time. That’s incredibly important in terms of us understanding how climate change especially impacts environments, ecosystems and species.

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Excavation at the site began in 2019 after two amateur fossil hunters spotted the remains and a Neanderthal ax in 2017 and alerted archaeology group DigVentures. The team has since recovered bones including tusks, leg bones, ribs, and vertebrae – some of which show evidence of possible butchery marks. Flint tools thought to have been used to clean fresh hides were also found.

“Archaeological sites from this period are rare, and critical for understanding Neanderthal behaviour across Britain and Europe. Why did so many mammoths die here? Could Neanderthals have killed them? What can they tell us about life in ice-age Britain? The range of evidence at this site gives us a unique chance to address these questions,” Lisa Westcott Wilkins of DigVentures told The Observer.

Other discoveries at the site include giant elks – twice the size of the animals today – with 10-foot-wide antlers, dung beetles, which used animal droppings for food and shelter, and freshwater snails. Seeds, pollen, and fossils belonging to extinct plants have also been uncovered.

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Ice Age Mammoth and Horse DNA Found in Soil Samples Left in Freezer

Researchers collect a soil sample in Canada’s Yukon.
Photo: Tyler Murchie

Fieldwork conducted about a decade ago is only now changing researchers’ understanding of large mammal extinctions during the Ice Age. An analysis of DNA locked away in frozen soil samples reveals that charismatic species like woolly mammoths and the wild horses of the Yukon stuck around for longer than previously believed.

The soil samples were taken from the Klondike region of Canada’s Yukon in the early 2010s, but no work on them had been published. Unlike traditional DNA samples, which might be taken from bone or hair of some organism, soils (even ancient ones) contain environmental DNA, which is genetic material locked away in the microscopic residue animals leave as they move through an environment.

The ice-cold cores from Klondike were later found in a McMaster University freezer by Tyler Murchie, an archaeologist specializing in ancient DNA at the university, who began to reinvestigate them. Murchie and his team’s work was published today in Nature Communications.

“I found them in the freezers while looking for a new project during my PhD,” said Murchie, lead author of the new paper, in an email. “One of my responsibilities at the ancient DNA centre is freezer maintenance, so I had a good idea of what cool stuff might be in there waiting for someone to study.”

One mystery the team sought to understand was the circumstances by which large North American species of the last Ice Age went extinct. Animals like woolly mammoths, steppe bison, and wild horses ranged across the continent for thousands of years, but the former two have disappeared from the planet. (Modern horses are directly related to Ice Age horses.)

What killed off the animals is typically attributed to one of two things: a warming climate that erased their food sources, or overhunting by humankind. Recent research has generally pointed to the former.

An artist’s imagining of the Pleistocene ecosystem.
Illustration: Julius Csotonyi

“I think a combination of climate, ecological, and anthropogenic pressures best explains the losses, but more research is needed to really solve that problem that Quaternary scientists have been grappling with for some 270 years,” Murchie said.

In the DNA contained in the ancient permafrost, the team found evidence that large mammalian species weren’t faring well even prior to the climate’s shift. In other words, the abundance of the DNA in samples began to diminish well before climatic shifts. (The team used radiocarbon dating of plant material in the soil samples to determine their ages.) But the animals didn’t vanish quickly; woolly mammoth and North American horse DNA remain present in the samples until as recently as 5,000 years ago, in the mid-Holocene, some 8,000 years later than the animals were once thought to have gone extinct.

“The rich data provides a unique window into the population dynamics of megafauna and nuances the discussion around their extinction through more subtle reconstructions of past ecosystems” said Hendrik Poinar, an evolutionary geneticist at McMaster University and also a lead author of the paper, in a university release.

Indeed it does, but that information is disappearing. As the climate warms, this time at alarming rate due to human causes, the permafrost is losing its permanence. Vast ponds are appearing in the planet’s northern reaches, causing swaths of the ground to collapse in massive sinkholes. The thaw also threatens the genetic information that has been cold-stored in the frozen earth. At the same time, though, the loss of permafrost has resulted in some incredible discoveries as preserved remains come out of the ice, including a still-furry cave lion cub and a 30,000-year-old wolf head.

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Ancient mammoth tusk discovered 10,000 feet deep in ocean off California coast

An ancient mammoth tusk has been retrieved from the deep ocean waters off the coast of central California that could be more than 100,000 years old. 

In 2019, scientists from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute were exploring an underwater mountain around 10,000 feet deep and nearly 200 miles offshore with a remotely operated vehicle. 

The researchers saw what appeared to be an elephant tusk and managed to take a small piece of the tusk at the time, but returned this summer to recover the entire specimen. 

With the help of researchers from the University of California, Santa Cruz and the University of Michigan who examined the find, scientists confirmed last week the tusk actually once belonged to a Columbian mammoth. 


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Researchers said the deep sea’s cold, high-pressure environment helped keep the ancient tusk, which measures more than 3 feet in length, intact.

“This specimen’s deep-sea preservational environment is different from almost anything we have seen elsewhere,” Daniel Fisher, paleontologist with the University of Michigan, said in a statement

“Other mammoths have been retrieved from the ocean, but generally not from depths of more than a few tens of meters,” Fisher said. 

Research is underway to extract more information from the tusk. Scientists are using CT scans of the tusk to determine the animal’s age and how it may have ended up deep offshore. 

The research team believes the discovery could be the oldest well-preserved mammoth tusk recovered from this region of North America. Dating of the tusk is underway and it’s estimated to be more than 100,000 years old. 

“You start to ‘expect the unexpected’ when exploring the deep sea, but I’m still stunned that we came upon the ancient tusk of a mammoth,” Steven Haddock, senior scientist with the Monterey Institute, said. 

The Columbian mammoth roamed the Americas as far north as the Northern U.S. and as far south as Costa Rica. The species went extinct some 11,500 years ago. 


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Mammoth tusk found at bottom of Pacific Ocean off California coast; Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute studying rare find

MOSS LANDING, Calif. — Scientists have found evidence of ancient land dwellers at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean.

Researchers with Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute say they discovered a Columbian mammoth tusk in the deep waters off California’s coast.

Scientists estimate the tusk is more than 100,000-years-old, CNN reported.

RELATED: Prehistoric fossil mystery solved thanks to help from Field Museum researchers

It is over 3-feet-long and was found 185 miles offshore and 10,000 feet underwater.

The researchers note mammoth remains from continental North America are particularly rare.

They plan to use the tusk’s DNA to refine what we know about mammoths in that part of the world.



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