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Furry head of ice age wolf found in Siberia

June 14, 2019

A 40,000-year-old wolf found in Siberia was bigger than its modern-day descendants. Kept cold in the permafrost, the wolf's fur, ears, brain and teeth had been preserved since the day it died in the Arctic.

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The head of a 40,000-year-old wolf found in Siberia
Image: picture-alliance/AP/Academy of Sciences of Yakutia/A. Protopov

The remains of the wolf were found on the banks of the Tirekhtyakh River in the Russian Arctic region of Yakutia last August.

Researchers at the Science Academy of Yakutia were given the head and worked with colleagues in Japan and Sweden to determine its age.

The academy's Valery Plotnikov said it was an ancient subspecies of wolf that lived alongside and became extinct at the same time as the mammoths. 

The find was unique because of its condition. The permafrost had preserved the fur, teeth, ears, tongue and brain for 40,000 years. Previously, only wolf skulls had been found, without fur or tissue. 

Bigger wolf

The severed head was that of an adult wolf whose overall size was about 25% bigger than those living today. Modern Siberian wolves vary in size, weighing anything from 70 pounds to 130 pounds (31 kg to 60 kg). Standing over 3 feet (90 centimeters) tall at the shoulder, they can measure up to 5 feet in length, including the tail. 

Now out of the ice, the head will be preserved for science by a process of plastination, which replaces water and fat with plastics. 

"This is a fixation by chemical means so that the fur would not come off and so that we could keep it (the head) unfrozen," Plotnikov said in a televised presentation at the academy.

There are believed to be about 200,000 wolves left in the world. Their numbers have been growing in Germany in recent years. 

Germany's wolf population has exploded

jm/sms (Reuters, AP)

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