A woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) carcass from Maly Lyakhovsky Island (New Siberian Islands, Russian Federation)

A partial carcass of an adult woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) found in 2012 on Maly Lyakhovsky Island presents a new opportunity to retrieve associated anatomical, morphological, and life history data on this important component of Pleistocene biotas. In addition, we address hematological, hi...

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Published inQuaternary international Vol. 445; pp. 89 - 103
Main Authors Grigoriev, Semyon E., Fisher, Daniel C., Obadă, Theodor, Shirley, Ethan A., Rountrey, Adam N., Savvinov, Grigory N., Garmaeva, Darima K., Novgorodov, Gavril P., Cheprasov, Maksim Yu, Vasilev, Sergei E., Goncharov, Artemiy E., Masharskiy, Alexey, Egorova, Viktoriya E., Petrova, Palmira P., Egorova, Eya E., Akhremenko, Yana A., van der Plicht, Johannes, Galanin, Alexei A., Fedorov, Sergei E., Ivanov, Evgeny V., Tikhonov, Alexei N.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 25.07.2017
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Summary:A partial carcass of an adult woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) found in 2012 on Maly Lyakhovsky Island presents a new opportunity to retrieve associated anatomical, morphological, and life history data on this important component of Pleistocene biotas. In addition, we address hematological, histological, and microbiological issues that relate directly to quality of preservation. Recovered by staff from North-Eastern Federal University in Yakutsk, this individual is a relatively old female preserving soft tissue of the anteroventral portion of the head, most of both fore-quarters, and the ventral aspect of much of the rest of the body. Both tusks were recovered and subjected to computed tomographic analysis in which annual dentin increments were revealed as cycles of variation in X-ray attenuation. Measurements of annual increment areas (in longitudinal section) display a pulsed pattern of tusk growth showing cycles of growth rate variation over periods of 3–5 years. These intervals are interpreted as calving cycles reflecting regular shifts in calcium and phosphate demand for tusk growth vs. fetal ossification and lactation. Brown liquid associated with the frozen carcass turned out to include remains of hemolyzed blood, and blood samples examined microscopically included white blood cells with preserved nuclei. Muscle tissue from the trunk was unusually well preserved, even at the histological level. Intestinal contents and tissue samples were investigated microbiologically, and several strains of lactic-acid bacteria (e.g., Enterococcus faecium, Enterococcus hirae) that are widely distributed as commensal organisms in the intestines of herbivores were isolated.
ISSN:1040-6182
1873-4553
DOI:10.1016/j.quaint.2017.01.007