Semyon Grigoryev, head of the Mammoth Museum in Yakutsk, said today: ‘The autopsy shows beautifully preserved internal organs.
Credit: North-Eastern Federal University |
‘The muscle tissues preserved their natural reddish colour. We can now claim that this is the best preserved Ice Age animal ever found in the world.’
Dr Grigoryev revealed in an interview with TASS that the foal is in an exceptional condition without any visible damage.
‘This is extremely rare for paleontological finds, because some of them are either incomplete, fragmented, with serious body deformations or strongly mummified,’ said the expert.
Credit: North-Eastern Federal University |
This is the second month of intense joint work of the Yakutian university team and scientists from South Korean Sooam Biotech Research Foundation.
‘Our studies showed that at the moment of death the foal was from one to two weeks old, so he was just recently born,’ said the scientist.
‘As in previous cases of really well-preserved remains of prehistoric animals, the cause of death was drowning in mud which froze and turned into permafrost. A lot of mud and silt which the foal gulped during the last seconds of its life were found inside its gastrointestinal tract.’
Credit: North-Eastern Federal University |
Work is so advanced that the team is reportedly choosing a mother for the historic role of giving birth to the comeback species.
Michil Yakovlev, editor of the university’s corporate media, said: “Hopefully, the world will soon meet the clone of the ancient foal who lived 42,000 years ago.”
The foal was found in the Batagai depression in Yakutia. An attempt to restore the species to life is seen as paving the way for a similar effort to restore to life the giant woolly mammoth. The same scientists are working on both projects.
Credit: North-Eastern Federal University |
‘More than 30 exhibits from Yakutia will travel to the exhibition,’ said Dr Grigoryev.
‘For the first time we’ll show the world’s only frozen woolly mammoth trunk, as well as the carcass of the Yukagir bison, an ancient partridge and the Batagai horse.’
Source: The Siberian Times [April 18, 2019]
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