Closeup of the first-ever preserved grown up cave bear - even the soft tissue of its nose is intact - unearthed on Bolshoy Lyakhovsky island. The extinct cave bear (Ursus spelaeus) may have been ...
A study published in Science Advances on April 1 reveals a new hypothesis that may explain why European cave bears went extinct during past climate change periods. The research was motivated by ...
The cave bear, Ursus spelaeus, was a prominent member of the Pleistocene megafauna in Europe, whose evolutionary history and ecological dynamics continue to captivate palaeontologists and evolutionary ...
Cave bears no longer exist. They went extinct tens of thousands of years ago, and all we have left of the massive ancient creatures are fossils. Figuring exactly why they disappeared has proven to be ...
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Using growth layers on the bear's skull, the researchers dated the remains at 35,000 years old and concluded that the cave bear was an adult around ten years old when it died. UrFU/Elizaveta ...
The skull of an small cave bear from the last Ice Age has been found in Russia and it may hold the earliest evidence of the animal being hunted by humans. A team from the Ural Federal University ...
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