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Baby mammoth preserved for 50,000 years unveiled in Russia's Siberia | TribLIVE.com
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Baby mammoth preserved for 50,000 years unveiled in Russia's Siberia

Associated Press
8057239_web1_8057239-ed858f232ab54debb67ef64d47f54698
Mammoth Museum at the Russian North-Eastern Federal University telegram channel via AP
The remains of a 50,000-year-old baby mammoth were uncovered by melting permafrost in Russia’s Siberia.
8057239_web1_8057239-65fae931a9724c77a7d67c686feeca67
Mammoth Museum at the Russian North-Eastern Federal University telegram channel via AP
The remains of a 50,000-year-old baby mammoth were uncovered by melting permafrost in Russia’s Siberia.
8057239_web1_8057239-287a4770d3164dd49b95828d0da03849
Mammoth Museum at the Russian North-Eastern Federal University telegram channel via AP
The remains of a 50,000-year-old baby mammoth were uncovered by melting permafrost in Russia’s Siberia.
8057239_web1_8057239-8af6f998e12546039a7fc3f4d29c252d
Mammoth Museum at the Russian North-Eastern Federal University telegram channel via AP
The remains of a 50,000-year-old baby mammoth were uncovered by melting permafrost in Russia’s Siberia.

MOSCOW — The remains of a 50,000-year-old baby mammoth uncovered by melting permafrost in Russia’s Siberia have been unveiled to the public.

Nicknamed Yana, the female mammoth weighs over 220 pounds and is 47 inches tall and 79 inches long.

Scientists believe that Yana was only 1 year old when she died some 50,000 years ago. They have described her remains, one of seven mammoth carcasses recovered worldwide, as the best-preserved mammoth body ever found.

Yana was found among the melting permafrost at the Batagaika crater in the far-eastern Russian region of Yakutia. Known as the “gateway to the underworld”, the crater is more than half a mile deep and has previously revealed the remains of other ancient animals, including bison and horses.

Yana will now be studied by scientists at Russia’s North-Eastern Federal University, which has its own dedicated mammoth research center and museum.

The university described the find as “exceptional” and said it would give researchers new information about how mammoths lived and adapted to their surroundings.

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