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Dissected mammoth calf smells like ‘fermented earth and flesh'

Dissected mammoth calf smells like ‘fermented earth and flesh'

Yahoo07-04-2025

A woolly mammoth calf discovered in 2024 underwent its first detailed postmortem analysis by researchers from Russia's Institute of Experimental Medicine in Saint Petersburg. After spending around 130,000 years buried in Siberian permafrost, Yana (named after the river basin in which she was found) is one of the most well-preserved mammoth specimens ever found. The opportunity to conduct a necropsy on Yana will likely yield a trove of new information about the species and its Late Pleistocene environment. That said, spending hours up-close-and-personal with a nearly 400-pound thawing carcass may not have been the most enjoyable experience.
According to the Agence France-Presse (AFP), Yana's examiners described the roughly four-foot-tall calf as smelling like a 'mixture of fermented earth and flesh' after spending tens of thousands of years 'macerated in the Siberian subsoil.'
The findings are already proving to be worth any unpleasantness. Over multiple hours, experts wearing sterile bodysuits, facemasks, and goggles made incisions into Yana's front quarters using scalpels, surgical scissors, and other medical tools. The permafrost's freezerlike conditions allowed the mammoth to retain much of its gray-brown skin, and even patches of reddish hair.
In addition to removing exterior samples, the team of biologists and zoologists collected portions of Yana's digestive tract, including her stomach and colon. Researchers are particularly interested in the contents of the colon, which could include ancient microorganisms that improve our understanding of the evolutionary trajectory to their modern descendants. Further examinations may also reveal the microbiotic environment inside Yana while she was alive.
The young mammoth's mouth also helped better pinpoint her age at the time of death. The discovery of milk tusks—akin to human baby teeth—proved Yana was at least a year old when she died, but not old enough for them to have already fallen out. And while her cause of death remains a mystery, one culprit can be crossed off the list of suspects: humans.
'Here on the territory of Yakutia there were not yet any humans,' Mammoth Museum director Maxim Cheprasov explained to the AFP, adding that they didn't arrive in the area until 28,000–32,000 years ago.
Although humans weren't responsible for Yana's death, they are almost certainly behind the circumstances that led to her discovery. After remaining frozen for 130,000 years, warming global temperatures are causing permafrosts to thaw and reveal their long-hidden contents.
While specimens like Yana offer valuable new insights, there are potential dangers to these opportunities. Some experts have expressed worries that melting permafrost may release hibernating pathogenic microorganisms into a world that isn't equipped to handle or resist them.

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In Photos: June's ‘Great Aurora' Stuns Skywatchers Around The World
In Photos: June's ‘Great Aurora' Stuns Skywatchers Around The World

Forbes

time7 hours ago

  • Forbes

In Photos: June's ‘Great Aurora' Stuns Skywatchers Around The World

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Time machine: How carbon dating brings the past back to life
Time machine: How carbon dating brings the past back to life

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Time machine: How carbon dating brings the past back to life

From unmasking art forgery to uncovering the secrets of the Notre-Dame cathedral, an imposing machine outside Paris can turn back the clock to reveal the truth. It uses a technique called carbon dating, which has "revolutionised archaeology", winning its discoverer a Nobel Prize in 1960, French scientist Lucile Beck said. She spoke to AFP in front of the huge particle accelerator, which takes up an entire room in the carbon dating lab of France's Atomic Energy Commission in Saclay, outside the capital. Beck described the "surprise and disbelief" among prehistorians in the 1990s when the machine revealed that cave art in the Chauvet Cave in France's southeast was 36,000 years old. The laboratory uses carbon dating, also called carbon-14, to figure out the timeline of more than 3,000 samples a year. - So how does it work? - First, each sample is examined for any trace of contamination. "Typically, they are fibres from a jumper" of the archaeologist who first handled the object, Beck said. The sample is then cleaned in an acid bath and heated to 800 degrees Celsius (1,472 Fahrenheit) to recover its carbon dioxide. This gas is then reduced to graphite and inserted into tiny capsules. Next, these capsules are put into the particle accelerator, which separates their carbon isotopes. Isotopes are variants of the same chemical element which have different numbers of neutrons. Some isotopes are stable, such as carbon-12. Others -- such as carbon-14 -- are radioactive and decay over time. Carbon-14 is constantly being created in Earth's upper atmosphere as cosmic rays and solar radiation bombard the chemical nitrogen. In the atmosphere, this creates carbon dioxide, which is absorbed by plants during photosynthesis. Then animals such as ourselves get in on the act by eating those plants. So all living organisms contain carbon-14, and when they die, it starts decaying. Only half of it remains after 5,730 years. After 50,000 years, nothing is left -- making this the limit on how far back carbon dating can probe. By comparing the number of carbon-12 and carbon-14 particles separated by the particle accelerator, scientists can get an estimate of how old something is. Cosmic radiation is not constant, nor is the intensity of the magnetic field around Earth protecting us from it, Beck said. That means scientists have to make estimations based on calculations using samples whose ages are definitively known. This all makes it possible to spot a forged painting, for example, by demonstrating that the linen used in the canvas was harvested well after when the purported painter died. The technique can also establish the changes in our planet's climate over the millennia by analysing the skeletons of plankton found at the bottom of the ocean. - Notre-Dame revealed - Carbon dating can be used on bones, wood and more, but the French lab has developed new methods allowing them to date materials that do not directly derive from living organisms. For example, they can date the carbon that was trapped in iron from when its ore was first heated by charcoal. After Paris's famous Notre-Dame cathedral almost burned to the ground in 2019, this method revealed that its big iron staples dated back to when it was first built -- and not to a later restoration, as had been thought. The technique can also analyse the pigment lead white, which has been painted on buildings and used in artworks across the world since the fourth century BC. To make this pigment, "lead was corroded with vinegar and horse poo, which produces carbon dioxide through fermentation," Beck explained. She said she always tells archaeologists: "don't clean traces of corrosion, they also tell about the past!" Another trick made it possible to date the tombs of a medieval abbey in which only small lead bottles had been found. As the bodies in the tombs decomposed, they released carbon dioxide, corroding the bottles and giving scientists the clue they needed. "This corrosion was ultimately the only remaining evidence of the spirit of the monks," Beck mused. ber/dl/jhb

Antarctica's brief gain in ice mass fuels climate denial
Antarctica's brief gain in ice mass fuels climate denial

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Antarctica's brief gain in ice mass fuels climate denial

"In a development that's leaving climate alarmists scrambling, new data shows that Antarctic ice has increased in size for the first time in decades -- reversing the long-touted trend of mass loss and environmental collapse," reads a May 28, 2025 Facebook post from The Hodgetwins, US conservative commentators whom AFP has previously fact-checked. Similar narratives dismissing the impact of climate change popped up on social media after traditional media reported in early May on a study's findings about Antarctic ice sheet (archived here). The study, from March, found that between 2021 and 2023, Antarctica's ice sheet expanded and therefore did not add to global mean sea level rise. The gain did not, however, counter the overall rise observed over those years because of ice loss and warming elsewhere (archived here and here). And weather conditions -- specifically unusual precipitations, including snow and some rain in east Antarctica and the Antarctic Peninsula -- were the primary reason the ice sheet gained mass, the study's corresponding author and other scientists told AFP. This short-lived, partial gain does not disprove the impact of climate change on the continent, they said. Yunzhong Shen, the study's corresponding author, told AFP May 19 that the increase observed between 2021 and 2023 occurred on a "too short timescale" to be treated as a trend reversal -- or to deny the impacts of climate change in the region (archived here). The gain witnessed in Antarctica's ice sheets also seems "to stop after 2024, which needs to be determined by further study," he said. James Kirkham, a scientist with the International Cryosphere Climate Initiative scientist, concurred (archived here): "The most recent levels reported by NASA thus far in 2025 look similar to what they were back in 2020, just before the abrupt gain." When looking at Antarctic total mass balance, NASA's dataset shows a net loss in mass since 2002. In fact, that "Antarctica would experience increased snowfall in a warmer climate is entirely expected as in a warmer climate the atmosphere can hold more moisture," Kirkham said in a May 27 email. "This means that the likelihood of extreme weather (such as the heavy snowfall which caused the recent mass gain in east Antarctica) increases." Brandon Daly, who studies glaciers and ice sheets, agreed (archived here). "When climate change deniers talk about the glaciers in Antarctica, they will usually only focus on the surface of the ice sheet," he said May 28, explaining that they ignore other ice loss. "Ice in contact with the ocean is what is melting, and it will continue to melt even if precipitation over the ice sheet increases," he said. "And it is the ocean-forced melting that is currently risking ice sheet instability and sea level rise." University of Minnesota climate scientist Peter Neff said May 27 that human climate change impacts in Antarctica are already widely seen around the Antarctic Peninsula and coastal Antarctica, but have been slower to penetrate inland (archived here). The continent is "like a giant pancake with very steep edges that slow the north to south penetration of warmer air over the southern ocean," he said. Almost all of Antarctica's ice losses come from glaciers, largely in west Antarctica and the peninsula (archived here and here). Robert McKay, director of Victoria University of Wellington's Antarctic Research Centre, told AFP May 15 that scientists are mostly concerned with these sectors because they may be "near a tipping point" that could lead to greatly accelerated sea level rise (archived here). Environmental change thus takes different forms in different regions. Brief temporary offsets of overall losses through recent regional snowfalls, such as the one observed between 2021 and 2023, are unlikely to change the long-term trajectory of continent-wide ice losses, with continued warming. Additionally, weather stations -- whose data network remains scarce in the continent -- have observed long-term warming and impacts on sea level rise, albeit with very large year-to-year variability given that Antarctica holds the most variable climate in the world (archived here and here). Satellite data has recently revealed that ice sheets with enough frozen water to lift oceans some 65 metres are far more sensitive to climate change than previously suspected (archived here). The amount of ice melting or breaking off into the ocean from Greenland and west Antarctica, now averaging about 400 billion tonnes a year, has quadrupled over the last three decades, eclipsing runoff from mountain glaciers. Both polar oceans are warming, with the "Southern Ocean being disproportionately and increasingly important in global ocean heat increase," according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the leading international consortium of climate scientists (archived here). AFP has debunked other claims about the Poles, including here.

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