In 2020, explorers searching for mammoth tusks in eastern Siberia uncovered an unexpected treasure: the preserved remains of a 32,000-year-old saber-toothed kitten. This unprecedented discovery provides scientists with new insights into the life and
Woolly mammoths, giant sloths and saber-toothed cats were a fact of life for early humans.
But today’s researchers can only hope to find fossils that will shed more light on the existence of these fascinating prehistoric mega-creatures — and why they went extinct.
New clues found in Earth’s northernmost regions are helping piece together portraits of these animals like never before as ice age remains surface from thawing permafrost.
Fantastic creatures
Paleontologists excavating in Russia’s Yakutia region uncovered the first known mummy of a saber-toothed cat. The cub was only about 3 weeks old when it died around 35,000 years ago.
The well-preserved remains, uncovered in Siberian permafrost, are nearly intact, including surprisingly soft fur and even the “toe beans” — as cat lovers call feline footpads — on its front paws.
It’s the first evidence from Asia of Homotherium latidens, and the specimen’s genetic information will help researchers better understand how the species lived and hunted.
When compared with modern lion cubs, the baby cat mummy’s anatomy revealed striking differences, including darker fur, smaller ears and peculiar adaptations to accommodate massive incisors it never had a chance to grow.
Ocean secrets
The search for Amelia Earhart’s missing Lockheed 10-E Electra plane in the Pacific Ocean continues after promising sonar imagery released in January turned out to be a plane-shaped pile of rocks.
The anomaly was initially spotted on the seafloor about 100 miles (161 kilometers) from Howland Island, where Earhart was expected to land more than 87 years ago.
But a return visit to the site in early November showed the object was a natural rock formation, rather than a sunken plane.
“Talk about the cruelest formation ever created by nature,” said Tony Romeo, CEO of exploration company Deep Sea Vision. “It’s almost like somebody did set those rocks out in this nice little pattern of her plane, just to mess with somebody out there looking for her.”
The red supergiant star, called WOH G64, is about 160,000 light-years from Earth in the Large Magellanic Cloud, which orbits the Milky Way. The close-up image shows an egg-shaped cocoon of dust and gas encircling the star, as well as an outer doughnut-shaped ring of dust.
Red supergiant stars shed outer layers before they explode. “If this is what we are seeing (WOH G64) doing, then a spectacle awaits us soon,” said Jacco van Loon, Keele Observatory director at the UK’s Keele University.
Earth may have sported a rocky ring — similar to Saturn’s — about 466 million years ago, according to new research.
At the time, our planet experienced numerous strikes from meteorites, many within 30 degrees of the equator, which has led some scientists to believe they were hitting the planet after raining down from a potential ring.
The hypothesis may also help researchers deduce why Earth experienced one of its chilliest global deep freezes, which could have been caused by the shadow cast from the ring.
Thousands of scientists have analyzed more than 100 million cells from over 10,000 people to make a gargantuan leap forward in understanding the human body.
It’s part of an ambitious endeavor to create an atlas of every single kind of cell we possess — which is quite a feat considering each human has more than 37 trillion cells.
The research teams uncovered information about an organ that influences immune system functions, mapped all the cells of the gut, and produced a blueprint of how skeletons form in utero.
“The challenge we’ve had is that we didn’t know the cells well enough to understand how variants and mutations in our genes are really affecting disease. Once we have this map, we’re able to better find the causes of disease,” said Aviv Regev, founding co-chair of the Human Cell Atlas.