ABSTRACT. Radiocarbon dates from horse fossils found on the North Slope of Alaska show that horses did live there during the last peak glacial (Duvanny Yar Interval, Marine Isotope Stage 2). Some previous paleoecological studies have assumed the region’s climate was too extreme for large mammals during the Duvanny Yar. Hoof structure suggests the Pleistocene horses survived on winter range characterized by low snowfall and/or snow removal by wind. Hoof growth rate suggests a substantial dietary volume of exposed dead grass during winter; hoof wear pattern indicates the horses were able to remain relatively sedentary, requiring neither long-distance winter migration nor constant digging through snow for food. Bones with mummified soft tissu...
ABSTRACT. In the mid-latitude mountains of North America, archaeological materials have been identif...
Yakutia, Sakha Republic, in the Siberian Far East, represents one of the coldest places on Earth, wi...
ABSTRACT. Nine radiocarbon dates on five genera of Quaternary mammals from north-em North America ar...
Radiocarbon dates from horse fossils found on the North Slope of Alaska show that horses did live th...
ABSTRACT. While bison were the most abundant large mammals in Eastern Beringia for most of the last ...
Radical restructuring of the terrestrial, large mammal fauna living in arctic Alaska occurred betwee...
The paper presents a description of a rare finding of the partial frozen corpse of the Yukagir horse...
Causes of late Quaternary extinctions of large mammals ("megafauna") continue to be debated, especia...
Librado, Pablo et al.Yakutia is among the coldest regions in the Northern Hemisphere, showing ∼40% o...
Detailed paleoecological evidence from Arctic Alaska’s past megafauna can help reconstruct paleoenvi...
This paper presents 75 new radiocarbon dates based on late Quaternary mammal remains recovered from ...
Understanding the population dynamics of megafauna that inhabited the mammoth steppe provides insigh...
Natural Trap Cave (Bighorn Mountains, Wyoming) preserves an abundance of fossil remains from extinct...
Abstract Recent debate about the timing of late Pleistocene extinctions in North America has taken p...
ABSTRACT. In the mid-latitude mountains of North America, archaeological materials have been identif...
Yakutia, Sakha Republic, in the Siberian Far East, represents one of the coldest places on Earth, wi...
ABSTRACT. Nine radiocarbon dates on five genera of Quaternary mammals from north-em North America ar...
Radiocarbon dates from horse fossils found on the North Slope of Alaska show that horses did live th...
ABSTRACT. While bison were the most abundant large mammals in Eastern Beringia for most of the last ...
Radical restructuring of the terrestrial, large mammal fauna living in arctic Alaska occurred betwee...
The paper presents a description of a rare finding of the partial frozen corpse of the Yukagir horse...
Causes of late Quaternary extinctions of large mammals ("megafauna") continue to be debated, especia...
Librado, Pablo et al.Yakutia is among the coldest regions in the Northern Hemisphere, showing ∼40% o...
Detailed paleoecological evidence from Arctic Alaska’s past megafauna can help reconstruct paleoenvi...
This paper presents 75 new radiocarbon dates based on late Quaternary mammal remains recovered from ...
Understanding the population dynamics of megafauna that inhabited the mammoth steppe provides insigh...
Natural Trap Cave (Bighorn Mountains, Wyoming) preserves an abundance of fossil remains from extinct...
Abstract Recent debate about the timing of late Pleistocene extinctions in North America has taken p...
ABSTRACT. In the mid-latitude mountains of North America, archaeological materials have been identif...
Yakutia, Sakha Republic, in the Siberian Far East, represents one of the coldest places on Earth, wi...
ABSTRACT. Nine radiocarbon dates on five genera of Quaternary mammals from north-em North America ar...