Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Global cooling likely caused mastodon death: study

Darpan News Desk, Canadian Press, 01 Dec, 2014 01:40 PM

    VANCOUVER — Scientists who re-examined the fossils of mastodons that once roamed what is now the Yukon and Alaska have revised their likely cause of death, concluding global cooling probably wiped out the ancient cousin of the elephant.

    Earlier estimates dated the mastodon bones at about 14,000 years old, but Grant Zazula, a paleontologist in the Yukon Paleontology Program, says the fossils are now believed to be about 75,000 years old.

    Instead of dying off at the end of the ice age, as first believed, Zazula says it's more likely the mastodons migrated to the area during a warming trend and then died when they couldn't survive the cold.

    He says the earlier theorized extinction date — at the end of the ice age — was suspect for experts because mastodons were adapted to warmer conditions.

    Zazula says the discovery is another piece of the puzzle in the disappearance of the massive creatures, and raises more questions about the extinctions of other animals presumed to have died off at the end of the ice age.

    He is the lead author of a mastodon study published this week in the scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CRA 'Accidentally' Gives CBC Tax Info

    CRA 'Accidentally' Gives CBC Tax Info
    TORONTO - The Canada Revenue Agency confirmed late Tuesday that it has accidentally disclosed confidential taxpayer information to the CBC. 

    CRA 'Accidentally' Gives CBC Tax Info

    B.C. Government Gives Environmental Green Light To Three LNG Projects

    B.C. Government Gives Environmental Green Light To Three LNG Projects
    VICTORIA — Three proposed multibillion-dollar liquefied natural gas projects in northern B.C. have been awarded the environmental green light by the provincial government.

    B.C. Government Gives Environmental Green Light To Three LNG Projects

    Alaska's construction of B.C. ferry terminal falls under Buy America policy

    Alaska's construction of B.C. ferry terminal falls under Buy America policy
    PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. — Construction of the Prince Rupert ferry terminal on British Columbia's West Coast has become tangled in Buy America provisions, meaning the facility that sits on Canadian Crown land must be built with U.S. iron and steel.  

    Alaska's construction of B.C. ferry terminal falls under Buy America policy

    Auditor General Considers B.C. Health Probe

    Auditor General Considers B.C. Health Probe
     VICTORIA — British Columbia's auditor general is considering launching a second review of the firings of eight health researchers after a former deputy minister accused the Liberal government of attempting to make him a scapegoat.

    Auditor General Considers B.C. Health Probe

    Richmond Man Admits Smuggling Rhino Horns, Elephant Ivory Into Canada

    Richmond Man Admits Smuggling Rhino Horns, Elephant Ivory Into Canada
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver-area antiques dealer has pleaded guilty in an American court to attempting to import endangered rhinoceros horns into Canada in a smuggling operation that also saw carved elephant tusks and other items illegally transported across the border.

    Richmond Man Admits Smuggling Rhino Horns, Elephant Ivory Into Canada

    Former Top BC Bureaucrat Won't Participate In Health Firings Review

    Former Top BC Bureaucrat Won't Participate In Health Firings Review
    VICTORIA — A former top Liberal government bureaucrat involved in the firings of eight health researchers two years ago says he won't take part in a review of the dismissals because it's not an independent probe.

    Former Top BC Bureaucrat Won't Participate In Health Firings Review