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  2. List of mammoth specimens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mammoth_specimens

    It is the first complete mammoth skeleton ever to be reconstructed. Originally, it was an entire mummified mammoth carcass. [2] Beresovka Mammoth Berezovka River, Siberia [4] 1900 [4] 44,000 [4] Except for head, it is an almost wholly preserved, mummified mammoth carcass. [4] Fairbanks Creek Mammoth (Effie) [5] Fairbanks Creek near Fairbanks ...

  3. Mammoth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammoth

    Cuvier coined the synonym Elephas mammonteus for the woolly mammoth a few months later, but E. primigenius became the widely used name for the species, including by Cuvier. [13] The genus name Mammuthus was coined by British anatomist Joshua Brookes in 1828, as part of a survey of his museum collection. [14]

  4. Research history of Mammut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Research_history_of_Mammut

    Engravings of the femurs of an unspecified extant elephant species (top), M. americanum (middle), and a "Siberian" mammoth (bottom), 1764 In 1739, a French military expedition under the command of Charles III Le Moyne (known also as "Longueil") explored the locality of "Big Bone Lick" in what is now Kentucky, an area previously known by Native Americans.

  5. Mammuthus meridionalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammuthus_meridionalis

    The taxonomy of extinct elephants was complicated by the early 20th century, and in 1942, Henry Fairfield Osborn's posthumous monograph on the Proboscidea was published, wherein he used various taxon names that had previously been proposed for mammoth species, including replacing Mammuthus with Mammonteus, as he believed the former name to be ...

  6. Mammuthus rumanus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammuthus_rumanus

    Mammuthus rumanus is suggested to have originated in Africa. [1] Material intermediate between African mammoths and Mammuthus rumanus has been reported from Bethlehem in the Levant, dating to sometime in the Late Pliocene, around 3-4 million years ago. [2]

  7. Columbian mammoth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbian_mammoth

    The Columbian mammoth (Mammuthus columbi) is an extinct species of mammoth that inhabited North America from southern Canada to Costa Rica during the Pleistocene epoch. The Columbian mammoth descended from Eurasian steppe mammoths that colonised North America during the Early Pleistocene around 1.5–1.3 million years ago, and later experienced hybridisation with the woolly mammoth lineage.

  8. Woolly mammoth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woolly_mammoth

    The woolly mammoth is the third-most depicted animal in ice age art, after horses and bison, and these images were produced between 35,000 and 11,500 years ago.

  9. Steppe mammoth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steppe_mammoth

    Mammuthus trogontherii, sometimes called the steppe mammoth, is an extinct species of mammoth that ranged over most of northern Eurasia during the Early and Middle Pleistocene, approximately 1.7 million to 200,000 years ago. The evolution of the steppe mammoth marked the initial adaptation of the mammoth lineage towards cold environments, with ...