National Post (National Edition)

Woolly mammoth's steps retraced

- EMMA TRANTER

More than 17,000 years ago, a woolly mammoth roamed enough of the Alaskan landscape to circle the Earth twice.

That's according to a new paper from an internatio­nal team of researcher­s who retraced the lifetime of one of the extinct ancient Arctic creatures. The mammoth's story is written in its tusk through tiny isotopes, which are tiny atoms, said Mat Wooller, a paleoecolo­gist at the University of Alaska.

“Isotopes are like a little chemical GPS (global positionin­g system) recorder,” Wooller said.

Looking at the isotopes, researcher­s analyzed 400,000 microscopi­c data points in a two-metre-long woolly mammoth tusk found in Alaska in 2018. They were able to determine the animal was a male who lived to be 28 years old, he said.

The way the tusk grows makes it easier to analyze, said Clement Bataille, a University of Ottawa researcher who also worked on the project.

Each year, new layers grow on the mammoth's tusk, “as if we you were stacking a bunch of ice cream cones on top of each other,” he said.

The isotopes found in the mammoth's tusk were matched with maps created by analyzing the teeth of hundreds of small rodents across Alaska. That data set was then used as a baseline to trace the mammoth's movements across Alaska.

“It's like a video game that helps us reconstruc­t the possible paths of the mammoth,” said Bataille.

“When the mammoth drinks water, the oxygen from this water is transmitte­d to its tissue and preserved because the tusk is constantly growing and reporting its diet and movements,” he added.

Bataille said his team was surprised to learn the mammoth's movements shifted abruptly around the age of 15. Researcher­s think that's likely when the animal was kicked out of its herd to head out on its own, the same way elephants treat their young.

During that time, the mammoth would sometimes travel 500 or more kilometres over a few months, Bataille said.

“There were some moments where he would just take off.”

The researcher­s learned that the mammoth had a much larger range than expected, covering most of Alaska in its lifetime. They also determined the mammoth had some favourite spots where he would stay put, such as river valleys and tundra plains where food was plentiful, said Bataille.

“At the end, you're just staring at your computer, cheering for the mammoth,” he said.

“It's almost like being there with him on the landscape.”

The mammoth's death at 28 is also a bit of a tragedy, Bataille said, because the animals were known to live into their 80s.

Bataille said its nitrogen isotopes spiked during the final winter of its life, which points to starvation.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS / JR ANCHETA, UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA FAIRBANKS ?? Mat Wooller, director of the Alaska Stable Isotope Facility, kneels among a collection of some of the mammoth tusks at the University of Alaska
Museum of the North. More than 17,000 years ago, a woolly mammoth roamed enough of the Alaskan landscape to circle the Earth twice.
THE CANADIAN PRESS / JR ANCHETA, UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA FAIRBANKS Mat Wooller, director of the Alaska Stable Isotope Facility, kneels among a collection of some of the mammoth tusks at the University of Alaska Museum of the North. More than 17,000 years ago, a woolly mammoth roamed enough of the Alaskan landscape to circle the Earth twice.

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