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The Yukagir Mammoth is a frozen adult male woolly mammoth specimen found in the autumn of 2002 in northern Yakutia, Arctic Siberia, Russia, and is considered to be an exceptional discovery. [1] The nickname refers to the Siberian village near where it was found. [2]
Yuka is a juvenile female natural mummy that was found near and named after the village of Yukagir, whose local people discovered it. This mammoth mummy was found as an overhanging ledge about 4 meters (13 ft) above the beach level in a low wave-cut bluff that was about 5 meters (16 ft) high.
Woolly mammoth fossils have been found in many different types of deposits, including former rivers and lakes, and in "Doggerland" in the North Sea, which was dry at times during the ice age. Such fossils are usually fragmentary and contain no soft tissue.
12,800 years ago, the woolly mammoth suddenly disappeared. A new piece evidence may finally explain why.
STORY: On Tuesday, a gold miner digging through the permafrost in the Klondike gold fields within Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin first nation traditional territory discovered a frozen woolly mammoth ...
Because mammoth DNA is a 99.6 percent match to the DNA of the Asian elephant, Colossal believes that gene editing can eventually create an embryo of a woolly mammoth. The eventual goal is to ...
Adams mammoth: Mouth of the Lena River, Siberia [1] 1799 [1] [2] 35,800 [1] [3] 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 ...
Scientists reconstructed the chromosomes of a 52,000-year-old woolly mammoth, potentially paving the way for its resurrection. Scientists Reconstructed a 52,000-Year-Old Woolly Mammoth’s DNA ...