Grisly Find Suggests Humans Inhabited Arctic 45,000 Years Ago (sciencemag.org) 138
sciencehabit points out this story which may rewrite the early history of humans in North America. From the Sciencemag story: "In August of 2012, an 11-year-old boy made a gruesome discovery in a frozen bluff overlooking the Arctic Ocean. While exploring the foggy coast of Yenisei Bay, about 2000 kilometers south of the North Pole, he came upon the leg bones of a woolly mammoth eroding out of frozen sediments. Scientists excavating the well-preserved creature determined that it had been killed by humans: Its eye sockets, ribs, and jaw had been battered, apparently by spears, and one spear-point had left a dent in its cheekbone—perhaps a missed blow aimed at the base of its trunk. When they dated the remains, the researchers got another surprise: The mammoth died 45,000 years ago. That means that humans lived in the Arctic more than 10,000 years earlier than scientists believed, according to a new study. The find suggests that even at this early stage, humans were traversing the most frigid parts of the globe and had the adaptive ability to migrate almost everywhere."
how frigid was it? (Score:1)
Re:old Johnny Carson joke (Score:2, Funny)
how frigid was it?
+3 Hillary's?
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This is disgusting and anyone who uprates it should have all rating privileges rescinded.
Re:2000km or 200km? (Score:5, Informative)
2000km south of the North Pole sounds like you'd be in a fairly warm area....
Around 71 degrees north (latitude).
So... northern alaska, greenland, northern tips of scandinavia, siberia... are all around 2000 km from the pole.
All of Iceland is further south.
The world is a big.
Iceland is a pretty green place though. (Score:3)
Thats because it has so much geothermal energy, you don't need to burn any fossil fuels, or nuclear or even wind turbines that might kill birds...
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That Eric the Red guy was a real estate speculator; yes, it was a lot warmer in the green land 1100 years ago (they had dairy farms on the coast!) but they still needed to convince people from Iceland to come over!
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The world is a big.
- It's a me, Mario!
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20000 km from the pole (Score:1)
I'm betting it was about 20,000 km from the (south) pole. :)
Siberia is 65 degrees, 2,700 km (Score:5, Informative)
The article mentions Siberia. Siberia is roughly 65 degrees north latitude, or 2,700 km from the pole. So they probably DID mean 2,000 km , which would be northern Siberia (not a warm place).
The three countries who claim territory at 2,000 km from the pole Russia, Canada and Greenland.
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2) Yenisei is the largest river in Siberia. Yenisey bay/gulf is where the river meets the ocean. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
The place is reallt not hospitable at all - permafrost, no vegetation. However climate must have been milder at the times, otherwise it could not have had mammoths.
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Greenland (Greenlandic: Kalaallit Nunaat [kalait nunat]; Danish: Grønland [nlan]) is an autonomous country within the Kingdom of Denmark, located between the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans, east of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago.
I mean, really, you cite Wikipedia yourself, you could check their entry on Greenland.
Re:Siberia is 65 degrees, 2,700 km (Score:5, Funny)
Which would be why the summary mentions North America.
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I think you meant Denmark.
Grisly find? (Score:1)
Sounds to me like they found a Mammoth, not a Grisly Bear...
Re: Grisly find? (Score:1)
Grisly. Grizzly. Two different words.
Re: Grisly find? (Score:5, Funny)
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Yeah, he was just panda-ing to the masses. (That's ursine to stop reading comments).
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Warmer. (Score:1)
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The timing puts it in the last ice age. In 45,000 years ice does not stay still but moves about a bit and the end of the last ice age many interesting things would have been happening with regard to mass flooding, break down of debris and methane generation. Most of civilised human ice age history would be logically under water. The more ice melts, the more water rises and the more readily coastal civilisations are inundated. Do you want to invest in underwater front, go right ahead but don't expect the re
BS emminent front (Score:1)
So all the liberal, alarmist, media that live and work in NYC are waffling? When NBC closes their Rockefeller center studio and moves it to Denver I'll take notice. You know because a lot of New York City is less than 16 feet above mean sea level!
Re:Warmer. (Score:5, Interesting)
Cities are disposable. Build a city, use it so long as it remains convenient to use, and when the water rolls over it, just abandon it.
WTF makes people think we need to defend cities? You've forgotten your nomad roots?
Re: Warmer. (Score:1)
Where where you when the US Gov't built all those Levies to 'defend' the city of New Orleans? We've fought very hard to defend the underwater city of New Orleans...
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Personally, I have always wondered why we rebuilt New Orleans after Katrina. Those who rebuilt below sea level should have been told that they are no longer covered by insurance and that they should move to higher ground.
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Food supply (Score:2)
Food supply is a big reason, and infrastructure. Now if you want to completely revert to a hunter-gatherer society, where do you think we're going to find enough food for everyone?
Neither hunting nor scavenging is going to do it. Mass-production is where it's at.
Oh, and shelter? Sorry, but a tarp hanging off a tree probably ain't gonna cut it for most people. Especially if it's cold and winter'ish.
Cities are generally built around resources. This can include minerals, water, food sources, or access. Even th
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But phorm, food production isn't done in the city. Its done in small scraps of land outside of the cities. And depending on how the modern times changes the entry of the inland, a lot of food production might be somewhere far inlands in the mountains.
In the large picture, the city is just a place to stay, where some infastructure is. Most of that infrastructure depends on infrastructure that isn't in the city, such as transportation(boats), farmland, mining, wood cutting, etc.
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Cities are where people stop being nomads and start building civilisation. It's clear where your priorities lie.
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Your argument, as stated, also applies to getting rid of fire departments. After all, why do people think they should defend houses?
It even applies to basic home maintenance and upkeep. Why reroof a home? You can always just move once the ceiling starts to leak and rot sets in.
A more nuanced view would look at the costs. What's the cost of defending cities versus the costs of relocating cities. What's the value of all the low-lying cities threatened by global warming? How much would it cost to mov
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You start off with absurdities, but you finish with good questions. I'll answer those latter with, "Well, maybe this time around, we can build sensibly!" Take Philadelphia, for instance. Or, Chicago. The nation's infrastructure stipulates that streets should be accessible to over-the-road trucks, about 72 feet long, about 10' 6" wide, and 13' 6" high. And, the streets should support those trucks weighing 80,000 pounds. However, both of the cities I've named have huge amounts of places where such truck
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Most cultures moved past being nomads .. they became agrarian, established and then industrialized.
Things like roads and running water and libraries and burial grounds and temples ... all of those things which helped us build modern society ... they eventually anchored us to cities.
Humans have fundamentally changed the landscape of the world, and there's far too many of us to try to pretend that our nomadic roots have any app
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"The more ice melts, the more water rises and the more readily coastal civilisations are inundated."
Well, not exactly, specifically here, since we are talking about Northern Eurasia.
When ice melts water rises, true, but there's also the fact that the melted ice adds weight no more to the land it sat on, so land also rises. It's then a matter of what rises more/faster: sea level or land and in Northern Europe (i.e. Scandinavia) it's land the one winning the race.
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No. Climate change is happening continuously, for all sorts of reasons - we understand them pretty well, and can map climate changes through recorded history - right up to about 70 years ago when an abnormal heating began, which just happens to coincide with what is expected from the rapidly accelerating rate at which humans are releasing geologic carbon into the atmosphere.
It's not like the process is unheard of - it just usually happens because of world-spanning high volcanic activity. None of that's h
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Why do you think that?
For mammoths - and many other grazing animals, the problem is not temperature, but whether or not they can get at food under the snow.
When the Arctic was colder, the moisture would have frozen out of the air further out in the margins (Scandanavia, Korea, Kamchatka) leaving Central Siberia very cold, but dry. At which point, the long daylight hours of the summer can produce relatively large amounts of growth which can be eaten in the winter - if it's not buri
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Assuming no sarcasm, nobody is saying the planet has never been warmer than it is today. That's a straw man tossed about by morons.
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It was sarcasm. And yet, also true. AGW people have said "its never been hotter". Because if it has been hotter, and cooler, then AGW and GW in General is not really a problem. Humans will survive. I'm more concerned with nutjobs with Nuclear weapons, which is much more immediate threat.
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If you're hearing that said, then you need to get a less-biased quote mine. In the last several thousand years, averaged over the planet, it has not been hotter. But in the longer term (looking back to e.g. the PETM), it has been hotter, consequent on dumping carbon into the atmosphere at rates that we are exceeding these days. Those climate excursions took in excess of 100,000 years to turn around, which is why they mark a mass extinction.
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So, you're admitting AGW are using geologically short sighted view of climate. Got it .
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The key part of that is on record. Records haven't been around very long compared to people. And they almost went away though vinyl is making a big comeback.
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Yes, today the earth is quite a bit warmer than 45,000 years ago, considering the ice ago that was going on at the time.
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I think you mean it was entering an ice age then. The peak of the previous ice age and glaciation here in North America was ~30k-25k years ago.
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Based on this source, it sounds more like we were right near the middle of the last glacial period: https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/pale... [noaa.gov]
"The most recent glacial period occurred between about 120,000 and 11,500 years ago"
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I could be reading this article wrong - I'm only looking at one of the graphs but I'm reading the temperature as warmer today than 50,000 years ago. By my reading you need to go back about 125,000 years to get a warmer temp. https://www.aip.org/history/cl... [aip.org] - graph link http://www.aip.org/history/cli... [aip.org]
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Yes, and AGW people say today is hotter than it was back then, when clearly this indicates otherwise!
Citations? Everyone I know seems to think that there were times when the earth was a lot warmer than it is now, an interesting tidbit since the sun was dimmer. Like the Paleozoic period, when there were no continual glaciers at all.
You might try not getting your science information off of conservative politicians.
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You might try not getting your science information off of conservative politicians
You might try getting your science information from Science, not "consensus". Science doesn't require consensus. Yet that is the ONLY argument AGW people can actually use. "We believe global warming, because 85% of scientists believe it"
Please remember, Piltdown Man was consensus "science" ;)
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You might try not getting your science information off of conservative politicians
You might try getting your science information from Science, not "consensus". Science doesn't require consensus. Yet that is the ONLY argument AGW people can actually use.
Bullshit. If you actually believe in science you are lying on purpose.
Here we go you are challenged - Let's work through this.
TEll me do you deny the accepted fact (confidence to the exclusion of any other explanation) that the constituent gases of an atmosphere have an effect upon the energy retention of that atmosphere? If yes continue No? Explain the easily reprovable experiments that indicate that this is the case, and why those experiments show incorrect results.
If yes, continue - if No explai
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Which is more or less 45,000 in dog years, so there ya go.
Stupid Question... maybe? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Stupid Question... maybe? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Stupid Question... maybe? (Score:5, Informative)
From the article - “The impact wounds on the bones with embedded stone fragments is conclusive evidence that people slayed this mammoth.”
They can often determine cause of death from skeletons long after any flesh has rotted or been removed. Impact strikes or piercing weapons leave imprints on the skeleton that are different to those of removing meat from a carcass. They can even tell which side a woman tended to carry her handbag from the dints left in her skeleton.
Re:Stupid Question... maybe? (Score:4, Interesting)
From the article - “The impact wounds on the bones with embedded stone fragments is conclusive evidence that people slayed this mammoth.”
They can often determine cause of death from skeletons long after any flesh has rotted or been removed. Impact strikes or piercing weapons leave imprints on the skeleton that are different to those of removing meat from a carcass. They can even tell which side a woman tended to carry her handbag from the dints left in her skeleton.
Note - the following is not a diss against n0creativity - he asked an intelligent question and was wishing to learn - so good on you n0creativity.
This is one of those things that some folks will never get. Because they cannot comprehend that some folks can know more than they do. It's why we have TV shows like "Ancient Aliens" where anything that humans have accoomplished is credited to aliens. Nikola Tesla? He got his ideas from Aliens, So did Einstein, Space flight, Pyramids, Nuclear weapons, Nuclear power generation. None of it by us stoopid hoomins. I listened to a guy this past week who denied the existence of dinosaurs. His proof? "That's just crazy", interspersed with "how did they know how old thes things were", "How did they know how to put the bones back together?" "That's just crazy!"
Is it any wonder that many of these same people cannot comprehend basic science? How could scientists know things like this stuff,? Must be fake. Arguments from personal incredulity. Which guarantees that the dumbest person in the room wins.
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But it's not to say it was from anything quite like a modern human. Maybe our more primitive ancestors were better with tools. Heck, maybe they were more like chimps.
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I think you're suggesting if maybe they just hammered away to butcher a dead animal?
No one in this thread really addressed it clearly, so I'll explain. They can tell if a wound/break to the skeletal structure happened before or after death. Its similar in nature to breaking a branch off a living tree vs breaking a branch off a dead tree. The breaks are completely different.
http://www.academia.edu/236437... [academia.edu]
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What I meant is that calling them "humans" means to many "Homo Sapien" or a close ancestor, but it's possible that it was a further branch of the species or an alternate branch which has died out. I suppose it depends on what you define as "human" though.
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Humans (Score:2)
These sorts of finds are wonderful (IMHO) and the more we learn about our distant ancestors, the more they turn out to have been resourceful and clever.
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the more we learn about our distant ancestors, the more they turn out to have been resourceful and clever.
Hardly. The 30,000y figure was simply the oldest known evidence. And people back then were extremely brutish compared to modern humans.
While new discoveries push back the date of migration, there have been no surprises - no evidence of navigation, pottery or agriculture, just primitive stone tools.
Compare even to the Polynesian expansion in the Pacific in recent millennia and there is a world of difference.
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"the more we learn about our distant ancestors, the more they turn out to have been resourceful and clever."
I get the point that putting back far away colonization from 30K to 45K years ago have an interesting impact on population demography or even sociology but "resourcefulness or cleverness"? The article also goes that line: "The find suggests that even at this early stage, humans were traversing the most frigid parts of the globe and had the adaptive ability to migrate almost everywhere."
What else woul
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Grisly? (Score:2)
Re:Grisly? (Score:4, Insightful)
Probably more like gristly if it's cheap ham.
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the adaptive ability to migrate almost everywhere (Score:2)
Yeah, only now we spend 90% of our energy trying to prevent it... Oy, the bureaucrats' burden is a heavy one.
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I have my suspicions that cavemen didn't suck on the tit of social services when they migrated somewhere, making the situation quite different indeed.
Ice Age Question (Score:1)
They should have said guessed 45000 years. (Score:1, Insightful)
Considering carbon dating has been shown to be about as accurate as a politicians promises, they should have just said they were guessing at how long it had been there.
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Considering carbon dating has been shown to be about as accurate as a politicians promises, they should have just said they were guessing at how long it had been there.
(sniff) (sniff) .. I smell a creationist...
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Considering carbon dating has been shown to be about as accurate as a politicians promises, they should have just said they were guessing at how long it had been there.
(sniff) (sniff) .. I smell a creationist...
Or possibly a scientist, since a scientists point out that Radioactive Carbon Dating is only reasonably accurate for up to about 40,000 years.
What's so grisly about this? (Score:2)
"Humans using primitive tools killed and we assume ate a giant fucking hairy elephant"
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But were they human... or something ELSE!
2000 kilometers *south* of the North Pole? (Score:4, Informative)
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But I guess that would conflict with the mention of North America in the write-up, which makes no sense.
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Here's the google map of the Yenisei Gulf in Russia:
https://www.google.com/maps/@7... [google.com]
If you use the Google Maps measure distance feature to measure distance to 90,0 on the map you get about 2000 km.
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There is no 90.0 on Google Maps. It uses Mercator projection, which puts the poles infinitely far away, thus they limit the display to approximately +/- 85 degrees.
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Pedantic point: It's redundant to say "2000 kilometers south of the North Pole". Any point on the Earth's surface that's 2000 kilometers from the North Pole is automatically 2000 km south of the North Pole. There is no way for something to be west or east of the North Pole, and definitely not north, so naming the cardinal direction is pointless. It's south by necessity.
Not to mention, which pole was north back then, and where were the geographic and magnetic north poles back then? Was that area tropical back then? Did the mammoth merely wander that far north after an encounter with man?
I have a bridge to sell you, says Mr. Oliphant (Score:1)
It is difficult to believe caveman hunted wholly-wooly mammoths with just stone tipped spears. The beast grew larger than modern asian elephants, about as big as the largest african elephant bulls and its body was covered in half a meter thick long, heavy greasy hair, almost like felt that easily stops thrown projectiles. The turnk would catapult people into LEO. More or less the biological equivalent of the AT-AT. Furthermore, it's a mammal with a large brain, not a bug with 2-bit DAC ladder neural system.
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That's OK, you have a right to feel entitled to your own ignorance.
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That those prehistoric people were probably at least as intelligent as the average slashdotter, and they likely spent decades testing, reviewing, debating, and verbally sharing various hunting skills. It's likely that they had many ways of crippling or killing large game other than the ones we can see by marks left on old bones.
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Grizly find? (Score:1)
They didn't even RTFA; they didn't find a grizzly, but a mammoth!
Bogus Headline (Score:3)
Or Mammoths are migratory (Score:3)
Further Evidence of GaiCentic crimate change (Score:1)
Mother Earth 45000 years ago was pissed off because there were all these humans up north, so she turned down the climate a notch and caused all these bitches to move to the middle where they are supposed to be. Then evil white republicans started spewing a lot of C02 into the air to heat things up again so they can build a tropical resort in Nunavut.
Stop anthropogenic climate change now. It will create more useable land for people. We don't want that. We want all our land to be barren, cold, and owned b
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How so?
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It isn't known when the first humans got to America (nor is it known if they left any descendents), but it was before about 13000 years before present. The record of human fossils in the parts of NE Asia near to North America is very, very sparse. This find shows that humans of about 45000 years ago had the behaviours and technologies necessary to survive at least part of the year at 72 degrees north, and if they could do it at the Yenisei, t