‘Cheering for the mammoth’: Scientists retrace the steps of 17,000 year-old animal
More than 17,000 years ago, a woolly mammoth roamed enough of the Alaskan landscape to circle the Earth twice.
That’s according to a new paper from an international team of researchers who retraced the lifetime of one of the extinct ancient Arctic creatures.
The mammoth’s story is written in its tusk through tiny isotopes, which are tiny atoms, said Mat Wooller, a paleoecologist at the University of Alaska.
“Isotopes are like a little chemical GPS (global positioning system) recorder,” Wooller said.