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cbc radio story camels in the arctic

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    cbc radio story camels in the arctic

    Interesting story on researchers finding evidence of camels in the arctic and yukon.

    wonder how this plays in the global warming debate?

    #2
    definately camel bones, one hump or two?

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/story/2013/03/05/pol-camels-in-high-arctic.html

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      #3
      I said it was a focilized tree but got laughed out of the meeting.

      Comment


        #4
        One Hump... with temps 14 to 22c warmer... I wonder
        what C02 levels were then?

        Cheers!

        Let's just put this out there: Camels used to live in
        Canada's High Arctic.

        It seems unlikely, but 3½ million years ago, Nunavut's
        Ellesmere Island was a totally different place.
        According to a group of scientists led by the Canadian
        Museum of Nature's Natalia Rybczynski, it was a boreal
        forest anywhere from 14 to 22 C warmer than it is
        today.

        It's hard to say whether or not the camels loved it up
        there. But why wouldn't they? The weather wasn't bad
        and there was plenty to eat. The remains were found in
        a fossil deposit called the Fyles Leaf Bed, after all. And
        for a vegetable muncher like the camel, Rybczynski's
        discovery of fossil leaves, wood and other plant
        material sounds like the perfect smorgasbord.

        COMING UP
        Quirks & Quarks talks to Natalia Rybczynski on March
        9 at noon on CBC Radio One

        And if eating a leaf and grass salad without relatives
        muscling in on your plate was top of list, well, this
        place fits the bill. The nearest known prehistoric
        camels before this find loped around in Yukon, 1,200
        kilometres to the south.

        Rybczynski and her team — John Gosse from
        Dalhousie University in Halifax and Mike Buckley from
        the University of Manchester in England — authored a
        study on their find for the online journal Nature
        Communications. It took them three summer field
        seasons.

        Still, camels in the high Arctic. Unbelievable!

        Maybe the most unlikely part of this story is the
        evidence Rybczynski's team used to make their
        astounding claim. Check out the picture next to this
        paragraph. That's right. It's a miniature sandbox filled
        with 30 bone fragments. Camel bone fragments, mind
        you.

        The fossil bones of the High Arctic camel are laid out
        in Dr. Natalia Rybczynski's lab at the Canadian
        Museum of Nature. (Martin Lipman, Canadian Museum
        of Nature)
        So how do you build a 900-kilogram, 270-centimetre-
        tall at the shoulder dromedary (that's a one-humped
        camel, for your information) out of what looks like a
        sabre-toothed tiger's table scraps?

        CSI - Camel Scene Investigation
        Detailed digital scans of each of the shards allowed
        Rybczynski to piece them together and build a tibia.
        That's the big lower leg bone in all mammals. It was
        part of an animal that belonged to the order of
        artiodactyla. Those are cloven-hoofed animals like
        cows, pigs, giraffes, hippos — and camels.

        And then Buckley stepped in. He's developed an
        identification technique called "collagen
        fingerprinting." Collagen is the main protein in bones.
        He takes a bit, analyzes it and then he compares his
        findings to the collagen profiles of 37 modern
        mammals.

        Guess who matched up closest? It was our buddy's
        insatiable southern cousin, the Yukon Giant Camel.

        Rybczysnki is pretty excited about her discovery.

        "It's thrilling! It's absolutely thrilling! Because it's the
        first evidence of this type of animal. So we have a new
        animal for the assemblage that we know lived there at
        the time," she told the CBC, "and also of course, it's
        the first evidence we have that camels were living in
        this forest-type environment."

        Camels in the high Arctic. Awesome!

        http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/story/2013/0
        3/05/pol-camels-in-high-arctic.html

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