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What killed the mammoths and other behemoths?
FR Post 6-6-2 | Interview with Ross MacPhee

Posted on 06/05/2002 3:34:28 PM PDT by vannrox

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To: muawiyah
Again, please show us an example of where a disease has caused a species to go extinct.
41 posted on 06/05/2002 5:49:30 PM PDT by Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
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To: muawiyah
I know it's difficult to think about such a complex process as a multi-species epidemic, but it happens. The best studied system involves human beings, pigs and birds, all living in China. They pass influenza back and forth, species to species, and every now and then create killer flu.

Yes, this is the perfect example which does not apply to the theory in question. Humans in China live in very densely populated areas, close together with their domesticated animals, and this fact allows them to pass diseases to each other. This does not apply to animals living in the wild, animals who also are too spread apart and thinly populated to quickly pass a disease, and thus create a contagion within their own species, assuming they are even capable of being infected by the cross-species disease in question. It's a very weak theory. And again, where is the species made extinct by a disease?

42 posted on 06/05/2002 5:54:47 PM PDT by Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
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To: Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
Occam's Razor applies. The simplist answer is human predation. And it's been proved; there is an example. Think Dodo.
43 posted on 06/05/2002 5:59:37 PM PDT by Alas Babylon!
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To: Alas Babylon!
Occam's Razor applies. The simplist answer is human predation. And it's been proved; there is an example. Think Dodo.

Of course when it comes to the human mind, in practice, Occam's Razor is often powerless against the combined forces of human self-interest and self-deception. Both the politically correct leftists and some "conservatives" have strong political motivations for denying that ancient mankind could have exterminated entire species.

44 posted on 06/05/2002 6:03:42 PM PDT by Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
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To: Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
I don't know why. If I was living 15-25KYA, I would propably enjoy hunting mammoth. And pass the steak sauce!
45 posted on 06/05/2002 6:12:32 PM PDT by Alas Babylon!
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To: Gladwin
I'm going to say this again. I want you to listen to me. I did not have sex with kill that mammoth. (Ms. Lewinsky.)
46 posted on 06/05/2002 6:15:26 PM PDT by VadeRetro
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To: Carry_Okie
I don't know if you are on the ping lists for these things. I know you are on a lot of lists.
47 posted on 06/05/2002 6:18:53 PM PDT by farmfriend
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To: Alas Babylon!
I'd be willing to bet that mammoth is actually mighty tasty...
48 posted on 06/05/2002 6:20:38 PM PDT by general_re
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To: VadeRetro
I thought the mammoth was the junior senator from NY????
49 posted on 06/05/2002 6:21:21 PM PDT by Alas Babylon!
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To: AAABEST
I saw the "Waddler" get into a cab the other day. Looks like he lost 100 lbs. Still a mammoth of a man with a pea for a brain.
50 posted on 06/05/2002 6:23:17 PM PDT by undergroundwarrior
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To: Alas Babylon!
I thought the mammoth was the junior senator from NY????

Only from the belt down. ;)

51 posted on 06/05/2002 6:29:17 PM PDT by VadeRetro
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To: Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
Again, where is the evidence for diseases making species go extinct? To argue this one would have to ignore the capacity for species to develop increased immunity to diseases.

A good for-instance is the American Indians. They had no immunity to pox diseases and died in droves, even if they were far from the white men who carried the diseases to the New World.

I don't have a problem with the disease scenario per se, I just don't see how a very sparse human population could spread it all around North America, from tropics to ice floes, from east to west, in such a short time. Also left to the imagination is some idea of how all of these very different animals were somehow vulnerable to a virus that had probably never seen their RNA before.

52 posted on 06/05/2002 6:40:04 PM PDT by r9etb
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To: vannrox
There is no known instance of a disease wiping an entire species off a continent in recorded history as far as I know. If you don't believe in cosmic catastrophes within the age of man, than the activity of man is the only thing left to try to explain the great pleistocene dieouts and that's basically what the "overkill" and "blitzkrieg overkill" theories amount to, i.e. an attempt to blame the recent loss of all of our North American megafauna on the ancestors of the American Indians.

Scientists have gone to lengths to explain how mammoths might have lived, commissioning artwork showing mammoths trooping through snow-covered tundras, their massive fur coats much in evidence. What these pictures don't show is silos or grocery stores in those tundras; the mammoths would need them.

The problem is that the bulk of mammoth remains are found in the far reaches of Canada and Alaska, and in Island groups to the North of Siberia in the Arctic circle.

The question is, how given anything like the standard version of Earth history, did vast herds of such large creaturesever find food when the entire territory is covered by ice ten months of the year? Elephants are gluttonous; they spend most of their waking hours eating, in fact, McGowan has stated that he does not understand how anything ever ate enough to get bigger than elephants since there would not appear to be time in the day for it.

You could literally take the healthiest elephant on Earth, fit him with the best fur coat and the best pair of jogging shoes in the world, start him off from any point on Earth habitable to elephants, and build for him a highway to the Liakhovs, and he would never get there. Winter would arrive and he would starve before he got there.

This conundrum has scientists flamboozled to so great an extent that their pronouncements on the subject often don't even sound coherent. Typical would be the mammoth article in the Talk.origins/Ediacara/Toromanura "FAQ" system which, aside from an irrelevant discourse on whether the occasional specimen found in the ice was quick-frozen or mummified, discusses every adaptation which the mammoth supposedly had for life in cold climes other than the vital one, i.e. what adaptation did they have for living without eating? Typically, the article notes that Arctic climes must have been significantly warmer than they are now to allow for mammoth herds, without telling us how that might have been given any possible history of our Earth which could be projected backwards to those times starting from present conditions and known processes, i.e. without using the dread non-word "catastrophe".

Velikovsky claimed that these vast herds, the remnants of which are seen in those arctic circle island groups, were peacefully grazing on vast fields which were in temperal zones, when the entire surface of the Earth shifted due to one of the catastrophes hediscusses, that they very quickly thus ended up in arctic regions along with their fields,and froze to death or otherwise died due to effects of the catastrophe itself.

Again, the real problems are:

1. how did vast herds of mammoths ever inhabit regions which a mammoth today could not even get to much less live in?

and

2. how do the vast bulk of their remains come to be found in obvious scenes of vast destruction?

Vine DeLoria is a past president of the National Council of American Indians and the best known American Indian author of the last 50 years or so. His "Custer Died for Your Sins" is the standard text on Indian affairs in universities.

The Native American section of any Barnes/Noble or Borders store will have ten or twenty of Vine's books, including one, "Red Earth, White Lies", which is a book about catastrophism, and about the megafauna dieouts. Deloria utterly destroys the "overkill" and "blitzkrieg overkill" theories, as well as the general Bering Strait hypothesis concerning how Indian Ancestors got here.

DeLoria Notes:

In even the most prejudiced murder trial there is one essential element: there has to have been a killing. Fancy legal terminology generally requires a body the corpus delictus as the TV detec- tive shows are fond of telling us. It would seem reasonable, if one was to promulgate a theory of blitzkrieg slaughter as have Martin and Diamond, to identiiy where the bodies are buried and then take the reader on a gut-wrenching tour through a graveyard of waste and butchery. We are deprived of this vicarious thrill because the evidence of the destruction of the megafiuna suggests a scenario well outside the orthodox interpretation of benign natural processes. Therefore mere mention of the reality of the situation is anathema to most scholars. So let us see what the actual situation is.

The first explorers of the northern shores of Siberia and its offshore northern islands and of the interior of Alaska, and some of its northern islands, were stunned to discover an astro- nomical number of bones of prehistoric animals piled indis- criminately in hills and buried in the ground. The graveyards of these animals were classified as "antediluvian" (prior to Noah's flood) by the majority of scientists and laypeople alike who still believed the stories of the Old Testament. Near these grave- yards, incidentally, but located in riverbanks on the northern shore of Siberia, are found the famous Siberian mammoths whose flesh was supposedly edible when thawed.

Reading an extensive set of quotations is always tedious to readers but I hope you will bear with me in this chapter be- cause it is only in the repetition of the reports of the discoveries of these areas that the entire picture of the demise of the mam- moths and other creatures really becomes clear. These Siberian remains are not the thousands of mammoth bones which Jared Diamond thinks are searched frantically by archaeologists seek- ing signs of human butchering. It is doubtful that any archaeol- ogists or paleontologists have made extensive studies of the skeletons in these locations or we would certainly have a far different view of megafauna extinction than is presently ac- ceptable to orthodox scholars.

Russian expeditions to Siberia and the northern islands of the Arctic Ocean began in the latter half of the eighteenth cen- tury, and with the discovery of these large mounds of animal bones, most prominently the tusks of mammoths and other herbivores, franchises were given to enterprising people who could harvest the ivory for the world market. Liakoff seems to have been the first iniportant ivory trader and explorer in the late eighteenth century. After his death the Russian govern- ment gave a monopo~ to a businessman in Yakutsk who sent his agent, Sannikofi, to explore the islands and locate additional sources of ivory. Sannikoff's discoveries of more islands and his reports on the animal remains found there are the best firsthand accounts of the Siberian animal graveyards.

Hedenstrom explored the area in 1809 and reported back on the richness of the ivory tusks. Sannikoff discovered the island of Kotelnoi, which is apparently the richest single location, in 1811. Finally, the czar decided to send an official expedition and from 1820 to 1823, Admiral Ferdinand Wrangell, then a young naval lieutenant, did a reasonably complete survey of the area. Since these expeditions and explorations were inspired by commercial interests and not scientific curiosity; the reports are entirely objective with no ideological or doctrinal bias to slant the interpretation of the finds.

Around the turn of the century interest in the Siberian is- lands seems to have increased, whether as a result of the few Christian fundamentalists who were not reconciled to evolu- tion frantically searching for tangible proof of Noah's flood, or as part of the leisure activities of the English gendemen of the time, we can't be sure. The definitive article on the Siberian prehistoric animal remains was written by the Reverend D. Gath Whitley and published by the Philosophical Society of Great Britain under the title "The Ivory Islands in the Arctic Ocean." It drew on older sources, primarily reports of expedi- tions of the ivory traders, and captured the spectacular nature of the discoveries well.

Liakoff discovered, on an island that now bears his name, rather substantial cliffs composed primarily of frozen sand and hundreds of elephant tusks. Later, when the Russian govern- ment sent a surveyor, Chwoinoff, to the island he reported that, with the exception of son~e high mountains, the island seemed to be composed of ice and sand and bones and tusks of ele- phants (or mammoths) which were simply cemented together by the cold.Whitley reported:


   Sannikoff explored Kotelnoi, and found that this large
   island was full of the bones and teeth of elephants, rhi-
   noceroses, and musk-oxen. Having explored the coasts,
   Sannikoff determined, as there was nothing but bar-
   renness along the shore, to cross the island. He drove in
   reindeer sledges up the Czarina River, over the hills,
   and down the Sannikoff River, and completed the cir-
   cuit of the island.All over the hills in the interior of the
   island Sannikoff found the bones and tusks of ele-
   phants, rhinoceroses, buffaloes, and horses in such vast
   numbers, that he concluded that these animals must
   have lived in the island in enormous herds, when the
   climate was milder.5

Hedenstrom explored Liakoff's island in 1809 and discov- ered that". .. the quantity of fossil ivory . . . was so enormous, that, although the ivory diggers had been engaged in collecting ivory from it for forty years, the supply seemed to be quite undiminished. On an expanse of sand little more than half a mile in extent, Hedenstrom saw ten tusks of mammoths stick- ing up, and as the ivory hunters had left these tusks because there were still other places where the remains of mammoths were still more abundant, the enormous quantities of elephants' tusks and bones in the island may be imagined?' Indeed, a number of explorers reported that after each ocean storm the beaches were littered with bones and tusks which had been ly- ing on the sea bottom and brought to shore by wave action.

The elephant or mammoth bones and tusks were the most spectacular finds primarily because they were so plentiful and consequently they attracted public attention the most. The is- lands contained an incredible mixture of bones of many extinct and some living species of mammals. Mixed with the animal bones were trees in all kinds of conditions. Whitley quoted some of the Russian explorers as reporting "it is only in the lower strata of the New Siberian wood-hills that the trunks have that position which they would assume in swimming or sinking undisturbed. On the summit of the hills they lie flung upon another in the wildest disorder, forced upright in spite of gravitation, and with their tops broken off or crushed, as if they had been thrown with great violence from the south on a bank, and there heaped up?'7

A few conclusions can be drawn from the reports of the Russian ivory traders. First, it appeared that several reasonably large islands were built primarily of animal bones, heaped in massive hills and held together by frozen sand. To indicate the scope of the debris, we should note that all of these islands are found on modern maps of the area, indicating that we are not talking about little tracts of land of limited area. Second, the sea floor north of Siberia and surrounding the islands was covered with so many additional bones that it was worthwhile for the ivory traders to check the beaches after every storm to gather up tusks and other bones.

Third, and very important for estimating the scope of the disaster, the ivory was of outstanding quality, so much so that the area provided most of the world's ivory for over a century. Estimates of the number of tusks taken from the islands range in the neighborhood of 100,000 pairs taken between the 1770s and the 1900s. Whitley noted that Sannikoff himself had brought away 10,000 pounds of fossil ivory from New Siberia Island alone in 1809.9- In reality; however, only about a quarter of the ivory was of commercial grade, so the true figure must approach half a million pairs of tusks.

Fourth, an amazing variety of animals, many extinct, were mixed with the mammoth and rhinoceros bones, although these two animals have become symbolic of the whole menagerie. Fifth, trees, plants, and other floral materials were in- discriminately mixed with the animal remains, sometimes lead- ing the Russians to suppose that the islands represented a sunken isthmus or broad stretch of land where these animals and the companion plants lived in a warmer climate. The chaotic na- ture of stratification of the remains soon abused that notion.

Finally, it is important to note that none of the bones of any of the species had carving or butchering marks made by human beings. N. K.Vereshchagin wrote: "The accumulations of mam- moth bones and carcasses of mammoth, rhinoceros, and bison found in frozen ground in Indigirka, Kolyma, and Novosibirsk lands bear no trace of hunting or activity of primitive man. Here large herbivorous animals perished and became extinct because of climatic and geomorphic changes, especially changes in the regime of winter snow and increase in depth of snow cover."9 The "climatic and geomorphic changes" must have been very sudden indeed and exceedingly violent, consid- ering the fact that these bones are always described as "heaps" of material deposited as if they had been thrown into a pile by an incredibly strong force.

The testimony regarding the richness of the animal remains in the Arctic north of the continental masses is not restricted to Russian sources. Stephen Taber, writing in his report "Perenni- ally Frozen Ground in Alaska: Its Origins and History," had this to say about the Siberian islands:

Pfizenmayer [citation omittedj states that in the New Siberia island collectors have "found inexhaustible sup- plies of mammoth bones and tusks as well as bones and horns of rhinoceros and other diluvial mammals"; and Dr. Bunge, during expeditions in the summers of 1882-1884, "gathered almost two thousand five hun- dred first class mammoth tusks on the new Siberian is- lands of Lyakhov; Kotelnyi, and Fadeyev;" although many collectors had previously obtained ivory from the islands since their discovery in 1770 by Lyakhov.~~

It would seem obvious to anyone seriously pursuing the question of the demise of the mammoth and the other mega- herbivores that a good place to locate the bodies to determine the cause of their demise would be the islands north of the Siberian peninsula. Yet we hear not a word about them in sci- entific articles and books concerning the overkill hypothesis.

When we inquire if the Alaskan area has similar deposits, we learn that the situation is the same. Early gold miners in Alaska discovered that in many cases they had to strip off a strange de- posit popularly called "muck" in order to get to the gold-bearing gravels.The muck was simply a frozen conglomerate of trees and plants, sand and gravels, some volcanic ash, and thousands if not milhons of bits of broken bones representing a wide variety of late Pleistocene and modern animals and plants.

Two scholars describe the scenes of destruction and chaos which the muck represents. Frank Hibben, in an article survey- ing the evidence of early man in Alaska, said that while the for- mation of muck was not clear,". . . there is ample evidence that at least portions of this material were deposited under cata- strophic conditions. Mammal remains are for the most part dis- membered and disarticulated, even though some fragments yet retain in this frozen state, portions of llgaments, skin, hair, and flesh. Twisted and torn trees are piled in splintered masses con- centrated in what must be regarded as ephemeral canyons or arroyo cuts."'1

Stephen Taber's report echoes the same conditions. He says: "Fossil bones are astonishingly abundant in frozen ground of Alaska, but articulated bones are scarce, and complete skeletons, except for rodents that died in their burrows, are almost un- known."'2 Many laypeople will be confused by this technical language and fail to grasp what Taber is saying, allowing him to imply a benign orthodox interpretation when the situation re- quires that a clearer picture be drawn.

When a scholar says "articulation" of bones he means an arrangement of bones that a person observing them would identify as a complete skeleton and from which an experienced observer could identify the species.To say that articulated bones are scarce, then, means that the bones are scattered and mixed so badly that expert examination is needed to idemify even the bone itself, let alone the species from which it comes. Remem- ber this problem of articulation, for we shall meet it again in another context. Taber concludes with the observation that "the dispersal of the bones is as striking as their abundance and indicates general destruction of soft parts prior to burial."13 In other words,Alaskan muck is a gigantic pile of bones represent- ing a bewildering number of species, a good number of them the megafauna I have been discussing.

We find the missing megafauna of the late Pleistocene in the Siberian islands, in the islands north ofAlaska, and in the muck in the Alaskan interior. Obviously we have here victims of an immense catastrophe which swept continents and left the de- bris in the far northern latitudes piled in jumbled masses that now form decent-sized islands. Most anthropologists and ar- chaeologists avoid discussing these deposits because the ortho- dox uniformitarian interpretation of the natural processes precludes sudden unpredictable actions.

Paul Martin, in private correspondence with me in June 1993, stated flatly that the mammoths could not have been de- stroyed by any such force or event.14 The sole basis he gave for that conclusion was radiocarbon dating of mammoth remains in the Siberian and Alaskan muck. I will have more to say about the reliability of radiocarbon dating below but if we were to accept his argument, then we would have to create a scenario where Paleo-Indians kill all these animals without leaving a trace of a spear point or hatchet blade, drag the carcasses out to sea some 150 miles north ofAlaska, and dispose of the evidence of their misdeeds. Here friendly wolves would not be much help.

Although Martin maintains that his thesis explains the disap- pearance of the megafauna, his argument really centers on the loss of three species: mammoths, mastodons, and ground sloths, with an occasional reference to horses and camels that makes it appear as if the important species have been covered. But overkill avoids asking about the possibly half-million mammoth skeletons lying frozen in the Arctic regions because that would completely negate the theory. <>


53 posted on 06/05/2002 6:46:24 PM PDT by medved
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To: Alas Babylon!; blam
Since we have been homo spaiens sapiens, whenever we entered an entirely new area, the big meaty animals went extinct. I've also seen studies showing how only a moderately heavy predation of an animal species can have a sprial effect downward on that species survival, especially large animals that have few young that take years to reach adulthood. My vote still resides with (hungry) man the predator as the culprit.

Ha ha ha. Africa gives the lie to this. You're arguing post hoc, ergo propter hoc. The more likely explanation is that the same thing that enabled people to travel into hitherto inaccessible areas was the same thing that made a big impact on the large fauna in those areas. One thing would be a sudden global cooling caused by massive volcanic eruptions. The ejecta would cause a global decrease in temperatures and sunlight which would both result in decreased plant growth. Ice-ages are characterized by decreased precipitation and a build-up of snow and ice resulting in lowered ocean levels, permitting travel into formerly inaccessible areas (and a need to do so in order to search for food). The places in the world that had mega-fauna also happen to be those that, for the most part, lie far to the north where effects of a downturn in the climate would be exacerbated by the latitude (ie, all across Siberia and North America). Australia has obviously undergone a major climatic change that turned a lot of it into desert. Much as most of North Africa and the Middle East used to be lush grasslands and home to mega-fauna. Now some of the last places on earth with mega-fauna are equatorial Africa and the Asian subcontinent. Remember that the woolly mammoth and woolly rhinoceros aren't necessarily inhabitants of continuously cold climes. They are (were) voracious plant eaters. Plants don't grow in continuously cold climes. Not enough of them to support the kind of tonnage mammoths/elephants need to survive. Besides, remember that in Siberia mammoths have been found quickfrozed with buttercups still in their mouths. This was not the doing of humans, unless you want to posit that humans moving into the area brought about a very sudden climate change.

The question is, have there been such worldwide downturns in climate due either to massive volcanic eruptions or to asteroid/cometary impact or close-calls? Yes, undoubtably, both during human history and prehistory. Do such downturns have a disproportionately great effect on very large animals? Also without a doubt. The disease/hunting hypothesis is itself an example of an opportunistic phenomenon--the need for devising a fundable thesis project or for carving out a new niche in academia. Besides, even if some common disease organisms were found in the remains of these large animals, they would only argue for a proximate cause of death. It's also well-known that animals that are stressed and starved are far more susceptible to infection than healthy animals. Massive stress and starvation would be (and has been) most easily accomplished by rapid climate downturns (such as happened in or around 540 AD, for example).
54 posted on 06/05/2002 6:48:00 PM PDT by aruanan
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To: Gladwin
Thanks for the ping. I'm glad the mammoth is extinct! (Someone had to say it.)
55 posted on 06/05/2002 6:54:59 PM PDT by PatrickHenry
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To: Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
It never ceases to amaze me the lengths to which some politically correct scientists will go to deny the obvious. After all, they have to defend the myth of the American Indian as "noble, ecologically sensitive, soulful mystical types". They just can't admit that the sudden extinction of quite a few large mammal species in North America (horse, camel, mammoth, mastodon, giant sloth, etc.) coincided with the arrival of the American Indian (the current American Indian migrants from 10-15,000 years ago, not the earlier, non-American Indian migrants).

There are a couple of cases in which gold being discovered in a region led within a short space of time to the construction of a number of new churches in the region, as well as to new whorehouses. People like yourself who didn't know how to look past first-level correlations naturally assumed that religion was the root cause of immorality.

Other than that, the first time in the history of the world that humans ever had the combination of firepower and mobility to even think about exterminating animal species off entire continents was the advent of Chengis Khan's army. To try to picture American Indian ancestors doing anything like that is a sick joke.

56 posted on 06/05/2002 6:58:11 PM PDT by medved
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To: Vast Buffalo Wing Conspiracy
Again, please show us an example of where a disease has caused a species to go extinct.

Seems like he gave pretty good examples of the honeycreeper (at least in lower altitudes), the Golden Toad (sightings have dropped to zero in 5 years), and the African Wild Dogs (from canine distemper)

Also, remember the findings about the pygmy mammoths living on an isolated island until about 5,000 years ago.

57 posted on 06/05/2002 7:03:21 PM PDT by chaosagent
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To: general_re
mammoth is actually mighty tasty

Weren't there some frozen carcasses found in Siberia fresh enough to cook a steak and eat it?

The last mammoth died about 4000 years ago in Alaska, although some say that was a baby pigmy mammoth, which means nothing to me. Also there were stories of mammoths in Canada just 400 years ago.

58 posted on 06/05/2002 7:13:35 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: RightWhale
Also there were stories of mammoths in Canada just 400 years ago.

In 1811 David Thompson reported seeing mammoth tracks near the Athabasca river.

a.cricket

59 posted on 06/05/2002 7:34:13 PM PDT by another cricket
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To: another cricket
mammoth tracks near the Athabasca river

I take a look before stepping outdoors, mainly because sometimes the way is blocked by the furry side of a moose, but you never know, a mammoth in the yard would be interesting for talk around the water cooler. Mammoths would probably eat my vegetable garden even quicker than moose do. Fence? What fence? Tromp! Trample! Stamp! Slurp! Mmmmm, fresh cabbages.

60 posted on 06/05/2002 7:46:15 PM PDT by RightWhale
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