ARCHAEOLOGISTS in Serbia say
they have discovered a rare mammoth field containing the remains of at least
five of the giant beasts that lived here tens of thousands of years ago.
The discovery last week at
the Kostolac coal mine, east of the Serbian capital of Belgrade, is the first
of its kind in the region. It could offer important insight into the ice age in
the Balkans, said Miomir Korac from Serbia's Archaeology Institute.
"There are millions of
mammoth fragments in the world, but they are rarely so accessible for
exploration," he told The Associated Press.
"A mammoth field can
offer incredible information and shed light on what life looked like in these
areas during the ice age."
The remains were found
during coal excavation about 20 metres below ground. Mr Korac said the mammoth
field stretches over some eight hectares of sandy terrain.
In 2009, a well-preserved
skeleton of a much older mammoth was found at the same site. Vika - as the
female skeleton was dubbed - is up to one million years old and belonged to the
furless, so-called southern mammoth.
The bones discovered last
month probably belong to the so-called woolly mammoth, which disappeared some
10,000 years ago, said Sanja Alaburic, a mammoth expert from Serbia's Museum of
Natural History.
Ms Alaburic explained that
"this discovery is interesting because, unusually, there are many bones in
one place," probably brought there by torrential waters.
Mr Korac said Serbian
archaeologists already have contacted colleagues in France and Germany for
consultation. He said at least six months of work will be needed before all the
bones are unearthed.
Another mammoth skeleton was
discovered in northern Serbia in 1996. It belonged to a female mammoth that
lived about 500,000 years ago and is now on display in the town of Kikinda,
near the Hungarian border.
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