Next stop France for oldest baby mammoth

Jun 21, 2010 by Patrick Filleux
Mammoth Khroma is seen in March 2010 in Yakutsk. Discovered in the permafrost of northern Siberia just last year, this rare example of prehistoric monster is on its way to Paris to be analysed, treated for the germs it's harbouring and eventually placed on display.

Name: Khoma. Looks like: A baby mammoth. Age: somewhere above 50,000 years.

Discovered in the of northern Siberia just last year, this rare example of prehistoric monster is on its way to Paris to be analysed, treated for the germs it's harbouring and eventually placed on display.

Mammoths -- slow, woolly and they didn't eat people -- have long had a good press. Just think Manny the caring mammoth in Hollywood's successful "Ice Age" movie franchise.

But this project may open another window on a distant past that is all too unfamiliar, what life was like for creatures of that time and the environment they shared with .

Khoma is the eldest of six baby mammoths found in Siberia over the past 200 years, said Bernard Buigues, a noted French expert on the herbivores who works in close collaboration with Russian authorities.

"It wasn't possible to use to date it, which means it's more than 50,000 years old as carbon-dating isn't effective after that point," he told AFP.

Khoma -- it's unclear whether it's male or female -- died aged just six or seven months. It was discovered by a hunter in July 2009 in melting permafrost on the banks of the river Khroma some 2,000 kilometres (1,300 miles) north of Yakutsk near the Arctic Ocean.

The ice-encased body had been partially eaten by foxes which devoured the trunk and the top of its head.

Initially, a team of Russian scientists examined the animal then informed Buigues, who works with authorities in Moscow for his paleontological project, which is behind Khoma's trip to Europe.

Buigues, 55, is a renowned mammoth specialist who in 1999 unearthed Jarkov, a rare adult woolly .

Early microbiological analysis have shown Khoma is harbouring very old but potentially lethal germs, most probably anthracis, which can cause anthrax and black lung disease, thus demanding extreme precautions for its transport here and further analysis.

Khoma, still encased in ice, is enclosed in an isolated container and will be handled initially at a laboratory in Grenoble, which is the only one in the world specialised in gamma ray treatment.

The same technique has been used on other pre-historic and archaeological objects -- "we treated Ramses II's mummy in 1977. It was less than 1,800 years old and was infected with a fungus that was attacking it," Laurent Cortella, the lab's nuclear physician who will treat Khoma, told AFP.

"Our baby, inside its box, will undergo three to four days of a continuous bombardment of 20,000 grays of gamma rays," he said, grays being the unit that measures absorbed dosage.

"The slightest lethargic little germ from time immemorial hasn't the least chance of resisting when you realise that one gamma ray of four grays kills a human.

"We've never handled such an old object or fossil, nor a creature unearthed from the permafrost."

Afterwards, Khoma will be transported to Puy-en-Velay in central France for studies and a general autopsy before going on public display in an exhibition on mammoths and their prehistoric contemporaries.

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User comments : 3

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Shootist
not rated yet Jun 21, 2010
20,000 grays of gamma rays

Measuring radiation? Let us count the ways:

Rads
Roentgen
R.E.M.
Curies
Sievert
Greys?

What the devil is s grey?

SI multiples for gray (Gy) Submultiples Multiples
Value Symbol Name Value Symbol Name
10−1 Gy dGy decigray 101 Gy daGy decagray
10−2 Gy cGy centigray 102 Gy hGy hectogray
10−3 Gy mGy milligray 103 Gy kGy kilogray
10−6 Gy µGy microgray 106 Gy MGy megagray
10−9 Gy nGy nanogray 109 Gy GGy gigagray
10−12 Gy pGy picogray 1012 Gy TGy teragray
10−15 Gy fGy femtogray 1015 Gy PGy petagray
10−18 Gy aGy attogray 1018 Gy EGy exagray
10−21 Gy zGy zeptogray 1021 Gy ZGy zettagray
10−24 Gy yGy yoctogray 1024 Gy YGy yottagray
Shootist
not rated yet Jun 21, 2010
Won't allow an edit. But will allow me to edit this. meh.

5 gray radiation is a fatal dose for a 75kg human.
Wayfarer
not rated yet Jun 22, 2010
"Slow,woolly,and they didn't eat people". Well, I don't know about you guys, but I feel totally boned up on the mammoth now. You learn something new every day. Heh.

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