What happened to the mammoths of the ivory islands?

  • Thread starter Andre
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In summary, the mammoth remains that were discovered on the island of Vega in Siberia were so numerous that it was assumed to be composed of the bones and tusks of elephants. This is a myth that is likely incorrect because a modern paper found trees growing there at the time that it was supposed to have never thawed. Additionally, the abundance of remains suggests that a catastrophe or transport of carcasses and remains with rivers and shallow seas may have occurred.
  • #1
Andre
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I tend to focus on the newest studies in order to understand what happened in the past, however sometimes old material makes it clear that we will probably not find out, due to the actions of our previous generations.

For instance during the https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000VQ09AO/?tag=pfamazon01-20 of the Vega it was discovered that the north of Siberia and the islands was littered with mammoth remains.

Such was the enormous quantity of mammoths' remains that it seemed to Chwoinoff that the island was actually composed of the bones and tusks of elephants, cemented together by icy sand.

This is reported by D.G. Whitley in "The ivory islands of the Arctic ocean" an article published in the 'Journal of the transactions of the Victoria Institute, or Philosophical Society of Great Brittain' in 1910. Withley documented the trip and collected more tales about the abundance of bones and ivory.

More later
 
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  • #2
The PDF I have doesn't allow copying, although it can't be copyright, so I type quote a few sentences

The remains of the Mammoth in fact increase in numbers as we travel from southern to northenr Siberia, until we find them in their greatest abundance on the shores of the Arctic Ocean.

No problem with that; about the mummies:

These carcasses are, when discovered, quite perfect, and have been preserved in this condition by the perpetually frozen soil in which they are buried.

Rather unlikely since the mummies that are found today are more like peat mummies preserved by soil acids.

It's therefore absolutely necesary to believe that the bodies were frozen up immediately after the animals died and were never once thawed (emphasis author) until the day of their discovery. No other theory will explain the perfect preservation of the bodies of these great elephants

There is myth working in action. Totally wrong. you will see that a modern research paper like McDonald et al 2000 find trees at the place at the time that it was supposed to have never thawed.

Note that there is a reason for my signature :wink:
 
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  • #3
What also was discovered things like:
So enormous was the quantity of tusks of elephants and rhinoceroses discovered in New Siberia that in 1821 one trader brought away 20,000 lbs of fossil ivory from New Siberia alone (emphasis author)

That's the problem, large armies of mammoth hunters roamed the area to clear it out in the former centuries. Moreover, seeing the inaccuracies of some assumptions, that makes the whole article unreliable. So now it's impossible to find out,

-what the real density of the bones was per area,
-if the specimens were in situ
-if the specimens would have the same or different carbon dates
-ditto isotope ratios like δ18O δ13C, δ15N indicators for multiple things, health, food type,

And ultimately what caused such an abundance? A catastrophe or merely transport of carcasses and remains with rivers and shallow seas, which may have lasted years due to the modest temperatures?

It also means that what we find today may be disturbed by centuries of mammoth hunting, less useable bones and tusked tossed away by the hunters, and hence less suitable for reconstructions of the Pleistocene past.

Any ideas?
 
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  • #4
should the caracasses be transported to the burial ground by water, then you might want to guess the flow was torrential enough to carry them. the matrix of a sedimentary rock in torrential water is uneven, and random sizes of granules make such a matrix. if you see such kind of rockbed, you might guess a transportation. should the caracases be transported by glacier (which i would expect to happen as the ice age starts to retreat, because during the ice age, poles are further from the sun, and the precision motion decreases the angle to which Earth is inclined, forcing a stabler, colder climate in the poles, and in such condition ice is stable, and would hardly move.)

If the stuff is being carried by glaciers as an ice age retreats, i would expect the glaciers to loose their carrying capacity where they meet the arctic sea, and dump their load there, as ice melts into many tiny stream each of which has little power, this will also bring caracasses frm all over the land.

Since mammoth hunters were around during the ice age, i would expect them to stay below the polar circles, to 1. avoid blizzards from the polar winds - the westerlies will stop it in lower latitudes (ice covered crust would be smooth t let wind flow over the land) and 2. to have a proper day-night cycle.

I don't know much about those fossils, that's not my specialization, but it is interesting to investigate it...
 
  • #5
Andre said:
It also means that what we find today may be disturbed by centuries of mammoth hunting, less useable bones and tusked tossed away by the hunters, and hence less suitable for reconstructions of the Pleistocene past.

But sometimes we are lucky

A well-preserved mammoth carcass has been found by an 11-year-old boy in the permafrost of northern Siberia.

The remains were discovered at the end of August in Sopochnaya Karga, 3,500km (2,200 miles) northeast of Moscow.

...

On a side note..

Alexei Tikhonov, .., said this specimen could either have been killed by Ice Age humans, or by a rival mammoth.

Now why would you find a well preserved carcass, killed by ice age humans and next they omit to eat it? Then why would they have killed it in the first place? But that's another discussion.
 
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  • #6
Sorry that I ooverlooked your post

seanscon said:
...If the stuff is being carried by glaciers as an ice age retreats,

No there was no ice in North center and east Siberia during the last glacial maximum, see for instance Hubberten et al 2004

Since mammoth hunters were around during the ice age,...

I'm not aware of much archeologic evidence of abundant Clovis-like human presence in North Siberia, except for some exceptions, hardly enough to explain ivory islands.

The water transport is interesting. One may wonder though, if it requires some kind of catastrophe. For instance another very rich mammoth fauna site is the North Sea, of which a friend of mine speculates that (floating) carcasses were transported there by the rivers

Obviously without further evidence no hypothesis.
 

1) What are the ivory islands?

The ivory islands are a group of islands located in the Arctic region, known for their abundance of ivory and the presence of mammoths.

2) How did the mammoths get to the ivory islands?

It is believed that mammoths migrated to the ivory islands during the last Ice Age, around 10,000 years ago. As the ice sheets retreated, the mammoths were able to reach the islands and thrive in the cold climate.

3) How did the mammoths on the ivory islands survive in such a harsh environment?

Mammoths have several adaptations that allowed them to survive in the Arctic environment. These include a thick layer of fat and fur for insulation, large tusks for digging through snow and ice, and a specialized digestive system for processing tough vegetation.

4) Are there still mammoths living on the ivory islands?

No, all known species of mammoths went extinct around 4,000 years ago, including those on the ivory islands. However, there have been some reports of sightings of small, isolated populations of mammoth-like creatures on remote islands in the Arctic.

5) Why is ivory so abundant on the ivory islands?

The ivory found on the ivory islands is primarily from the tusks of mammoths. The cold climate and permafrost have preserved the remains of these ancient creatures, making it easier for ivory to be harvested and sold. However, poaching and illegal trade have contributed to the decline in mammoth ivory availability on the ivory islands.

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