Featured Post

Tracking air pollution disparities -- daily -- from space

Studies have shown that pollution, whether from factories or traffic-snarled roads, disproportionately affects communities where economicall...

Wednesday, September 9, 2020

Photos: Incredibly well preserved mammoth bones keep turning up in Mexico

Archaeologists in hard hats and face masks carefully remove earth from around enormous bones at the site of Mexico City's new airport, where construction work has uncovered a huge trove of mammoth skeletons.


The remains of dozens of the extinct giants and other prehistoric creatures have been found in Zumpango on the northern edge of the capital, which sits on an ancient lake bed.


"More than 100 individual mammoths, individual camels, horses, bison, fish, birds, antelopes and rodents have already been recovered," said army captain Jesus Cantoral, who heads the excavation team.


In total remains have been found at 194 spots across the site since the first discoveries were made in October last year during work on a fuel terminal, he told AFP.


mammoth bones body 1Palaeontologists of the National Institute of Anthropology work on the preservation of the mammoth skeletons. (Rodrigo Arangua/AFP)


Most of the animals are believed to have roamed the Earth between 10,000 and 25,000 years ago.


Experts worked painstakingly to extract the bones of one of the mammoth skeletons, taking care not to disturb a mound of earth supporting another specimen.


mammoth bones body 2Partial view of the skeletons found. (Rodrigo Arangua/AFP)


At the same time thousands of construction workers continued to labor away across the site as dozens of excavators and trucks shifted earth and transported building materials.


The authorities say they have kept a careful watch to ensure the precious remains are preserved during work on the airport, which President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has promised will be inaugurated in March 2022.


mammoth bones body 3(Rodrigo Arangua/AFP)


Stuck in mud


Experts believe the mammoths were drawn to the area by food and water provided by a lake that existed in prehistoric times.


"The place had a lot of natural resources, enough for these individuals to survive for a long time and for many generations," said archaeologist Araceli Yanez.







In winter the lake area became muddy, trapping the giant mammals who starved, she said.


"It attracted a large number of mammoths, and they got stuck, as is the case with this individual, and died here," Yanez added.


The lake was also very good for preserving the remains.


Mexico has been the scene of surprising mammoth discoveries before.


In the 1970s, workers building the Mexico City subway found a mammoth skeleton while digging on the capital's north side.


In 2012, workers digging to build a wastewater treatment plant outside the capital discovered hundreds of bones belonging to mammoths and other Ice Age animals.


And last year archaeologists found the skeletons of 14 mammoths in Tultepec, near the site of the new airport.


000 1M22SBMammoth tusks in Tultepec, November 2019. (AFP PHOTO/INAH)


Some bore signs that the animals had been hunted, leading experts to conclude at the time that they had found "the world's first mammoth trap."


The government began construction of the new aviation hub in 2019 at the Santa Lucia military airbase, months after canceling work on another partially completed airport.


Lopez Obrador, who ran on a pro-austerity, anti-graft platform, had criticized that project championed by his predecessor Enrique Pena Nieto as an unnecessary mega-project marred by corruption.


His administration has tasked the military with overseeing construction of the new airport, which will house a museum showcasing the mammoth skeletons and other ancient remains.


© Agence France-Presse





#Nature | https://sciencespies.com/nature/photos-incredibly-well-preserved-mammoth-bones-keep-turning-up-in-mexico/

No comments:

Post a Comment