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Frozen bird discovered in Siberia is 46,000 years old


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Frozen bird discovered in Siberia is 46,000 years old

 

When miners first unearthed a bird from permafrost in Siberia, it was so well-preserved that they might have thought the poor creature had perished just the day before.

But radiocarbon dating and genetic analysis later revealed that the frozen specimen was actually a 46,000-year-old horned lark.

 

The bird was discovered by fossil ivory hunters near the village of Belaya Gora in northeastern Siberia. They then brought it to scientists Nicolas Dussex, Love Dalén and their team of experts at the Swedish Museum of Natural History, who confirmed the bird’s classification.

 

Their research was published in the journal Communications Biology  on Friday.

 

“This finding implies that the climatic changes that took place at the end of the last Ice Age led to formation of new subspecies,” Dalén told CNN, suggesting that the icy avian corpse might be the ancestor of two of today’s lark species, including one type found in northern Russia and the other in the Mongolian steppe.

 

The bird’s remarkable condition is primarily thanks to its frozen burial site, but Dussex admits this particular case is extraordinary.

 

“The fact that such a small and fragile specimen was near intact also suggests that dirt/mud must have been deposited gradually, or at least that the ground was relatively stable so that the bird’s carcass was preserved in a state very close to its time of death,” he said.

 

The permafrost of Siberia, a layer of ice and soil that covers much of the region, has brought forth a number of paleontological marvels. Last year, Dalén and Dussex began a study on an 18,000-year-old canine that was dug up at the same site as the lark. But despite its near-perfect preservation, they could not conclude whether the mammal was a dog or a wolf.

 

We now have some news on the 18,000 year old #wolf or #dog puppy.

 

Genome analyses shows it's a male. So we asked our Russian colleagues to name it…

Thus, the name of the puppy is Dogor!

 

Dogor is a Yakutian word for "friend", which seems very suitable. pic.twitter.com/epIz8mEpVW

— Centre for Palaeogenetics (@CpgSthlm) November 25, 2019

 

As for the prehistoric lark, Dussex calls the finding “priceless” for the field of paleogenetics, thanks to its cache of primordial genetic material.

 

“This in turn will open new opportunities to study the evolution of Ice-Age fauna and understand their responses to climate change over the past 50 [to] 10 thousands of years ago,” said Dussex.

 

sauce

 

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