35,000 Years Later, Frozen Woolly Rhino Discovered

A woolly rhinoceros was today defrosted and revealed for the first time since it died in the frozen tundra of Siberia up to 40,000 years ago.

The animal of the extinct species was well-fed and is thought to have died after getting stuck in a swamp or river and drowning.

The extinct animal (pictured) was well-fed and is thought to have died after getting stuck in a swamp or river and drowning. Experts also believe it may have been chased and attacked by predators, possibly now-extinct mountain lions, after it was stuck

Woolly rhinoceroses were once commonplace across Europe, reaching as far west as England and as far east as modern-day China and South Korea before going extinct due to climate change around 14,000 years ago.

The adolescent rhino measures almost 8ft (2.4 metres) long and was around three or four years old when it died by river Tirekhtyakh in the Abyisky district of Arctic Yakutia, the world’s coldest permanently inhabited region. Beneath its mud-caked surface, it is thought to have preserved hazel fur.

The beast was found with intact teeth and a horn by local resident Alexei Savvin who alerted the authorities, which allowed the specimen to be carefully moved for further study at the regional capital Yakutsk

The beast was found with intact teeth and a horn by local resident Alexei Savvin who alerted the authorities, which allowed the specimen to be carefully moved for further study at the regional capital Yakutsk.

Experts then thawed out the frozen carcass and are now beginning anatomical tests to learn more about its life and death.

Media outlets were invited to its unveiling at the institution and took startling images of the animal.

Some of the first investigations on the remains will involve inspecting the unfrozen carcass for teeth marks of predators, possibly cave lions which lived in the region at the time.

Russian scientist Dr Valery Plotnikov said: ‘The level of preservation is unique. We are gathering an international team to study the rhino.

Pictured, a tooth from the woolly rhinoceros which is thought to have died at least 25,000 years ago after drowning in a swamp or river in what is now Siberia

‘All of its right side is preserved. It was very well-fed at the moment it died, even its underskin fat was preserved as a powder.

‘The rhino’s gender has not been determined yet, but will be known soon.’ Expert Dr Albert Protopopov said: ‘Most likely, the rhino drowned in the river.’

A horn from the beast was located at the site – and was previously pictured, but was not shown today.

Palaeontologist Dr Gennady Boeskorov: ‘The length of the body is approximately 236 centimetres (almost 8ft), which is around one metre less than an adult rhino. This means it was an adolescent.

‘The height at the withers is around 130 centimetres (4.3ft), which is 20 – 25 centimetres (7.8 – 9.8 inches) shorter than adult rhino.’

Experts say that it is 80 per cent preserved due to its icy grave but they have not disclosed whether DNA might be sufficient for scientists to seek to bring the long-gone species back to life.

Work is underway in the same region to restore the woolly mammoth species. The rhino was found in August 2020 and its discovery was revealed last month.

This rhino horn of the specimen as found, as well as teeth, from the adolescent woolly rhino which is thought othave been around three or four years old when it died

The age of the newly found rhino is still to be confirmed but is believed to be between 25,000 and 40,000 years old.

Evidence of the last meal of the new rhino remains in its insides.

Another similar beast named Sasha, located in 2010 in the same region was dated at 34,000 years. Sasha – seven months old at death – was found to have strawberry blond curls.

This colouring means the creature had a markedly different look to the slate grey rhinos of Africa.

But Sasha’s discovery – showing the stubs of two horns – also suggested the species was distinctly larger than the modern-day rhinoceros.

The species once roamed across modern Europe and Russia and were present in southern England.

Dr Plotnikov said of Sasha: ‘We have learned that woolly rhinoceroses were covered in very thick hair. ‘Previously, we could judge this only from rock paintings discovered in France.

‘Now, judging by the thick coat with the undercoat, we can conclude that the rhinoceroses were fully adapted to the cold climate very much from a young age.’

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