A group of Russian scientists has found an extraordinarily well-preserved mummy of a saber-toothed tiger cub, an extinct feline, in the permafrost of Siberia. died 37,000 years ago.
In a new study published by the Russian Academy of Sciences in Scientific Reportsresearchers have revealed unprecedented details of this long-extinct animal.
Scientists discovered that its neck was twice as thick as that of a modern lion cub. Besides, His jaw was specially adapted to house his famous cone-shaped incisors. Scientists even discovered how the puppy’s toes would have helped them walk on the snow of the last ice age.
In their study, the researchers write: “For the first time in the history of paleontology, the appearance of an extinct mammal that has no analogues in modern fauna.”
The remains of the mummified animal were found frozen in a block of ice in the Badyarikhskoe region, in the Russian republic of Yakutia. For unknown reasons, only the upper half of the body was found whole. However, the puppy’s incomplete femur and shin bone were also found relatively intact nearby.
Although it is not clear how the puppy died, researchers believe it would have lived for a period called late Pioceneduring which the Earth was covered in vast sheets of ice.
Previous studies have found numerous woolly mammoth bones on the ground in this area, but this is the first time that a completely frozen specimen of any species has been found.
Lead author Dr Alexey Lopatin and colleagues write: “Findings of frozen mummified remains of late Pleistocene mammals They are very rare.”
“Normally, animal bones from this period They are dispersed by scavengers and the elements, long before they can be found by scientists,” he continues.
“This means that still we don’t know much about the animals that walked the Earth during the last ice age,” says Lopatin.
However, thanks to this discovery, researchers now have a unique window into the development of this iconic species. The saber-toothed tiger is covered with dark brown fur that scientists describe as “short, thick, soft” and is longer in the neck and back.
When comparing the mummified saber-toothed tiger to a modern lion cub of a similar age, the researchers noted several obvious differences.
Most notably, the mummified feline was significantly more muscular and had a “very solid neck” and an unusual snout shape, significantly wider than that of a modern lion.
It is believed that this and other key adaptations allowed the saber-toothed tiger to develop its enormous fangs. Lopatin and his co-authors write: “One of the surprising features of the morphology of Homotheriumboth in adults and in the puppy studied, is the presence of an enlarged premaxillary bone“.
This bone, found in the front part of the upper jaw, it would have allowed the animal to develop a row of large cone-shaped incisors.
This particular specimen was too young to have grown its impressive fangsas scans showed he still had some of his baby teeth.
The incredible preservation of this specimen reveals the interesting ways in which the big cat adapted to its icy environment. In addition to a thick coat and small ears that help reduce heat lossthe saber-toothed mummy had wide legs to distribute its weight over the snow.
Likewise, the baby feline lacked carpal pads, thick skin pads found on the back of the wrist joint that, according to scientists, They help you walk in deep snow.
This big cat, Homotherium latidensis the only species of its genus known to have lived in Eurasia during this time period. The comparisons with species found in Spain suggest that it probably hunted large prey such as aurochs and deer.
But the discovery of this specimen so deep in Siberia suggests that they could have reached much further north than previously believed.
For now, researchers have only identified the most obvious and unusual features of the mummified cat, but they are already planning more research to discuss the puppy’s anatomy in much more detail.
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