6000 years?

Werbung:
Exactly when the ice melted. The ice began melting 22000 years ago and the last mammoth died 4000 years ago
They claim the Berezovsky Mammoth died around 44,000 years ago. The mammoth remained frozen in ice from its death until the turn of the 20th century.
 
They claim the Berezovsky Mammoth died around 44,000 years ago. The mammoth remained frozen in ice from its death until the turn of the 20th century.
The last mammoth died 4000 years ago. LOL you cannot believe your own claim

When was the last known mammoth alive?


Woolly Mammoth


Ancient elephant

One species, called woolly mammoths, roamed the cold tundra of Europe, Asia, and North America from about 300,000 years ago up until about 10,000 years ago. (But the last known group of woolly mammoths survived until about 1650 B.C.—that's over a thousand years after the Pyramids at Giza were built!)
 
The dilemma facing Bible deniers is that a mammoth preserved by freezing for thousands of years must have been frozen very rapidly and very deeply for its slowly cooling warm insides not to have decayed and destroyed
Exactly. They lived in the ice. Duuuuh.

the undigested assortment of a wide variety of green vegetation the mammoth was feeding on. And how did its environment change from summer to winter so rapidly and then remain winter permanently afterward for thousands of years?
The environment in Siberia doesn't change to the point they melt.

There was no silly worldwide flood. It's just another ridiculous religious fable. Your god killed everything in the planet including humans yet you think that attitude should be worshipped?
What a prick of a god you worship. Little wonder you're fycked in the head.
 
Exactly. They lived in the ice. Duuuuh.


The environment in Siberia doesn't change to the point they melt.

There was no silly worldwide flood. It's just another ridiculous religious fable. Your god killed everything in the planet including humans yet you think that attitude should be worshipped?
What a prick of a god you worship. Little wonder you're fycked in the head.
Mammoths lived in the ice? Can you elaborate
 
The last mammoth died 4000 years ago. LOL you cannot believe your own claim

When was the last known mammoth alive?


Woolly Mammoth


Ancient elephant

One species, called woolly mammoths, roamed the cold tundra of Europe, Asia, and North America from about 300,000 years ago up until about 10,000 years ago. (But the last known group of woolly mammoths survived until about 1650 B.C.—that's over a thousand years after the Pyramids at Giza were built!)
From Wikipedia:


List of mammoth specimens


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This list of Mammoth specimens covers mammoth remains which are either notable in their history or preservation. Mass accumulations of mammoth remains are included in the latter portion of this list.

List of notable individual fossil or subfossil mammoth remains[edit]

NameImageLocation of discoveryDate of discoveryAge of remains in
radiocarbon years BP
Comments
Adams mammothMouth of the Lena River, Siberia[1]1799[1][2]35,800±1200[1][3]It is the first complete mammoth skeleton ever to be reconstructed. Originally, it was an entire mummified mammoth carcass.[2]
Beresovka MammothBerezovka River, Siberia[4]1900[4]44,000±3,500[4]Except for head, it is an almost wholly preserved, mummified mammoth carcass.[4]
Fairbanks Creek Mammoth (Effie)[5]Fairbanks Creek near Fairbanks, Alaska[5]1948[5]21,300±1,300[5][6]It consists of the mummified head, trunk, and left forelimb of a mammoth calf. It was recovered from muck near prehistoric scraper.[5]
Fishhook Mammoth[7]Shoreline banks of the estuary of the Upper Taimyra River, Taymyr Peninsula, Siberian Federal District.[7]1990-1992[7]20,620±70[7]Partial woolly mammoth carcass[7]
 
Exactly. They lived in the ice. Duuuuh.
If they lived in the ice, how is it that 39 different species of tropical vegetation remained undigested in their mouths and stomachs at the time of their extremely rapid freezing thousands of years ago, to be thawed out only recently?
 
From Wikipedia:


List of mammoth specimens


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This list of Mammoth specimens covers mammoth remains which are either notable in their history or preservation. Mass accumulations of mammoth remains are included in the latter portion of this list.

List of notable individual fossil or subfossil mammoth remains[edit]

NameImageLocation of discoveryDate of discoveryAge of remains in
radiocarbon years BP
Comments
Adams mammothMouth of the Lena River, Siberia[1]1799[1][2]35,800±1200[1][3]It is the first complete mammoth skeleton ever to be reconstructed. Originally, it was an entire mummified mammoth carcass.[2]
Beresovka MammothBerezovka River, Siberia[4]1900[4]44,000±3,500[4]Except for head, it is an almost wholly preserved, mummified mammoth carcass.[4]
Fairbanks Creek Mammoth (Effie)[5]Fairbanks Creek near Fairbanks, Alaska[5]1948[5]21,300±1,300[5][6]It consists of the mummified head, trunk, and left forelimb of a mammoth calf. It was recovered from muck near prehistoric scraper.[5]
Fishhook Mammoth[7]Shoreline banks of the estuary of the Upper Taimyra River, Taymyr Peninsula, Siberian Federal District.[7]1990-1992[7]20,620±70[7]Partial woolly mammoth carcass[7]
What is your point?

What do we know about when mammoths went extinct? The most recent Alaska mammoth fossil is a 5,600-year-old tooth found in a cave on St. Paul Island. Researchers dated mammoth fossils found on Wrangel Island north of Siberia to 3,700 years ago, making that the “youngest” mammoth of which we know.
 
What is your point?

What do we know about when mammoths went extinct? The most recent Alaska mammoth fossil is a 5,600-year-old tooth found in a cave on St. Paul Island. Researchers dated mammoth fossils found on Wrangel Island north of Siberia to 3,700 years ago, making that the “youngest” mammoth of which we know.
I was supporting what I said earlier about those who claim the Berezovka mammoth died 44,000 years ago and had been frozen ever since until about 120 years ago.
 
I was supporting what I said earlier about those who claim the Berezovka mammoth died 44,000 years ago and had been frozen ever since until about 120 years ago.
So what, the mammoth that you quoted was not the last mammoth known, it is one mammoth found of thousands I wonder if your brain can really be this dysfunctional
 
Werbung:
Back
Top