Study maps mammoth’s 1,000-km trek, suggests species coexisted with humans in Alaska
A new study traces the 1,000-kilometre journey of a woolly mammoth from western Yukon to the interior of Alaska, where she died about 14,000 years ago, seemingly in the prime of her life, near a hunting camp for some of the region’s earliest humans.
Analysis of the mammoth’s tusk has unlocked insights into the iconic Ice Age species, with the research suggesting they “coexisted” for at least 1,000 years with some of the first people to cross the Bering land bridge into North America.
The tusk belonged to a female mammoth that was about 20 years old when she died, in the “prime of early adulthood,” says the research published Wednesday in the peer-reviewed journal Science Advances.
The study stops short of concluding the mammoth was killed by hunters near Alaska’s earliest-known archeological site dating back about 14,000 years.