The remains of a woolly rhinoceros from the Ice Age were discovered in Siberia

The remains of a woolly rhinoceros from the Ice Age were discovered in Siberia
The remains of a woolly rhinoceros from the Ice Age were discovered in Siberia
Anonim

In Siberia, they found the remains of a woolly mammoth that lived during the Ice Age. The carcass of the animal is well preserved thanks to the permafrost. Valery Plotnikov, the leading researcher of the mammoth fauna research department at the Academy of Sciences of the region, spoke about this.

It is noted that the body of the animal is better preserved than previously found specimens of this species. Plotnikov emphasized that all limbs, part of internal organs and a horn are present in the find. “A small nasal horn has also survived - this is rare, since it decomposes rather quickly. The research revealed traces of wear on it, that is, the rhinoceros used it actively for food,”the scientist explained.

He added that soft tissue was found in the back of the torso - possibly the genitals and part of the intestines. By examining the animal's excrement, scientists will be able to restore the paleoenvironment of that period.

Plotnikov also said that the age of the rhino was three to four years, that is, he was a teenager: he had already switched from lactation to plant food, but continued to live with his mother. He died, according to scientists, falling into a hole or a ravine.

American scientists have previously established that woolly mammoths on Wrangel Island in the Arctic have become extinct due to hereditary diseases formed against the background of a lack of genetic diversity.

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