Stuffy noses from plant allergies may have meant mammoths couldn't smell each other's pheromones, resulting in them ...
The now-extinct species of mammoth lived from the Middle Pleistocene era until its extinction 4,000 years ago.
A team of chemists and zoologists from Israel, Italy and Russia, has found evidence suggesting that part of the reason woolly mammoths went extinct was the onset of allergies that made it difficult ...
LONG-GONE species like the woolly mammoth, Tasmanian tiger, and dodo bird could return from the dead as part of a “de-extinction” campaign. The term “extinct” brings to ...
SCIENTISTS have revealed how a common condition suffered by millions could have also been what wiped woolly mammoths off the ...
A relative of the elephant, the woolly mammoth is one of the most famous extinct creatures in Earth's history. How exactly the species died out 4,000 years ago is something of a mystery ...
Gold miners have been moonlighting as paleontologists in the permafrost of Canada’s Yukon Territory. With over 5,000 fossils ...
His latest paper also makes it clear that woolly rhinoceroses belong on this list. Boeskorov is a senior researcher at the ...
Allergic rhinitis may have triggered a prolonged decline in birth rates amongst woolly mammoths - which is thought to have ...
Themes of identity, bonding, loss, self-realization and especially death permeate the numerous layers of Brandon ...
South Dakota's Mammoth Site is a museum where visitors can watch paleontologists uncover ancient mammoth fossils in real-time ...