News Release

Complete 9,000-year-old frozen bison mummy found in Siberia

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Society of Vertebrate Paleontology

Berlin, Germany (November, 2014) – Many large charismatic mammals went extinct at the end of the Ice Age (approx 11,000 years ago), including the Steppe bison, Bison priscus. A recent find in Eastern Siberia has uncovered one of these bison, literally, frozen in time.

The most complete frozen mummy of the Steppe bison yet known, dated to 9,300 years before present, was recently uncovered in the Yana-Indigirka Lowland and a necropsy was performed to learn about how this animal lived and died at the end of the Ice Age. The Yukagir bison mummy, as it is named, has a complete brain, heart, blood vessels and digestive system, although some organs have shrunk significantly over time. The necropsy of this unique mummy showed a relatively normal anatomy with no obvious cause of death. However, the lack of fat around abdomen of the animal makes researchers think that the animal may have died from starvation.

This project is being led by Dr. Natalia Serduk of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow, Russia with contributions from a large group of scientists mainly from Yakutsk and Moscow, Russia. But one project scientist, Olga Potapova, is from the Mammoth Site of Hot Springs in South Dakota, USA, she tells us, "The Yukagir bison mummy became the third find out of four now known complete mummies of this species discovered in the world, and one out of two adult specimens that are being kept preserved with internal organs and stored in frozen conditions", making this find one of high importance.

Dr. Evgeny Maschenko, another project scientist, from the Paleontological Institute in Moscow (Russia), comments, "The exclusively good preservation of the Yukagir bison mummy allows direct anatomical comparisons with modern species of Bison and cattle, as well as with extinct species of bison that were gone at the Pleistocene-Holocene boundary."

Frozen bison and mammoth mummies are changing the way we think about paleontology because of the large amount of information that can be ascertained from each specimen, with new scientific methods and approaches that became available within the last decade. Potapova adds, "The next steps to be done include further examination of the bison's gross anatomy, and other detailed studies on its histology, parasites, and bones and teeth. We expect that the results of these studies will reveal not only the cause of death of this particular specimen, but also might shed light on the species behavior and causes of its extinction."

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About the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology

Founded in 1940 by thirty-four paleontologists, the Society now has more than 2,300 members representing professionals, students, artists, preparators, and others interested in VP. It is organized exclusively for educational and scientific purposes, with the object of advancing the science of vertebrate paleontology.

Society of Vertebrate Paleontology website: http://www.vertpaleo.org

Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology

The Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology (JVP) is the leading journal of professional vertebrate paleontology and the flagship publication of the Society. It was founded in 1980 by Dr. Jiri Zidek and publishes contributions on all aspects of vertebrate paleontology.

Journal Web site: http://vertpaleo.org/Publications/Journal-of-Vertebrate-Paleontology.aspx

AUTHORS AND AFFILIATIONS:

NATALIA SERDUK
Paleontological Institute
Russian Academy of Sciences
Moscow
Russia
olgap@mammothsite.org

OLGA POTAPOVA
Mammoth Site of Hot Springs, SD, Inc.
Hot Springs, SD
United States of America

EVGENY MASCHENKO
Borissyak Paleontological Institute
Russian Academy of Sciences
Moscow
Russia

ALBERT PROTOPOPOV
Yakutian Academy of Sciences
Yakutsk
Russia

INNOKENTY PAVLOV
Yakut State Museum of History and Culture of the North
Yakutsk
Russia

ANASTASIA KHARLAMOVA
Institute of Human Morphology of the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences
Moscow
Russia

KONSTANTIN KIRIKOV
Yakutian State Agricultural Academy
Yakutsk
Russia

GENNADY BOESKOROV
Diamond and Precious Metals Geology Institute
Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences
Yakutsk
Russia

VALERY PLOTNIKOV
Yakutian Academy of Sciences
Yakutsk
Russia

STANISLAV KOLESOV
Yakutian Academy of Sciences
Yakutsk
Russia


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