The remains of animals dating back more than 10,000 years have been found in a cave in northern Norway providing the oldest example of an animal community living in the European Arctic region.
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Remains of animals dating back 10,000 years found in Arctic cave: ‘A rare snapshot of a vanished world’
The remains of animals dating back more than 10,000 years have been found in a cave in northern Norway providing the oldest example of an animal community living in the European Arctic region.
Gina Moseley has stepped foot in places no other human being has likely ever stepped before. A British paleoclimatologist at the University of Innsbruck, Moseley has built a career exploring ancient ...
In a remote corner of Northern Norway, inside a dark coastal cave sealed off for millennia, scientists have opened a rare time capsule of life from 75,000 years ago. The bones and DNA traces of dozens ...
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Scientists found Siberia’s most intact bear ever, and it’s stunning
The most complete bear ever recovered from Siberia’s frozen ground looks less like a fossil and more like a sleeping animal ...
Scientists have uncovered the remains of a vast animal community that lived in the European Arctic 75,000 years ago. The bones of 46 types of animals – including mammals, fish and birds – were ...
MOSCOW, June 18. /TASS/. Scientists of the Russian Geographical Society modeled a plan of an ice cave on the Franz Josef Land archipelago to forecast changes in the Arctic climate, the Russian Academy ...
"The ice caves do not last long, usually for several years," the Russian Arctic National Park's Director Alexander Kirilov said ARKHANGELSK, October 6. /TASS/. The Russian Arctic National Park's ...
Scientists have found evidence that the Asian continent was free of permafrost all the way to its northerly coast with the Arctic Ocean when Earth's average temperature was 4.5˚C warmer than today, ...
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