Mummified wolf pup from Ice Age unearthed in extraordinary condition, practically frozen in time

THE YUKON — A fascinating discovery in the Yukon has scientists howling with delight, so to speak. The mummified remains of a wolf pup dating back 57,000 years has been unearthed entirely frozen in time and in “spectacular” condition. The Ice Age creature’s head, tail, paws, fur and skin were perfectly preserved in the permafrost.

Its remains were dug up by a gold miner near Dawson City in the Yukon, and included exceptional details of the animal’s muscle tissues. The wolf, a female, died suddenly in a den collapse. The remarkable find opens a window on life in Canada’s far north when woolly mammoths roamed the Earth. It also sheds light on the seven week old pup’s lifestyle and the evolution of modern wolves.

The animal is the oldest ancient wolf on record.

Wolf Mummy Unearthed
The Ice Age creature’s head, tail, paws, fur and skin were perfectly preserved in the permafrost. Its remains dug up by a gold miner near Dawson City in the Yukon also included exceptional details of the muscle tissues. (Credit: Government of Yukon)

“She’s the most complete wolf mummy that’s ever been found,” boasts first author Julie Meachen, a professor of anatomy at Des Moines University, in a statement. “She’s basically 100 percent intact — all that’s missing are her eyes. And the fact she’s so complete allowed us to do so many lines of inquiry on her to basically reconstruct her life.”

How was the ancient wolf preserved so perfectly?

The animal has been named “Zhur,” which means “wolf” in the local indigenous Han language.

“It’s beautiful,” says Dr. Grant Zazula, a Yukon Government paleontologist. “It’s got the cute little paws and tail and the curled upper lip showing its teeth. It’s spectacular.”

One of the most important questions was how she ended up being entombed. It takes a unique set of circumstances to produce a permafrost mummy. “It’s rare to find these mummies in the Yukon,” says Meachen. “The animal has to die in a permafrost location, where the ground is frozen all the time, and they have to get buried very quickly, like any other fossilization process. If it lays out on the frozen tundra too long it’ll decompose or get eaten.”

Animals that die slowly or are hunted by predators are less likely to be found in pristine condition.

“We think she was in her den and died instantaneously by den collapse,” explains Meachen. “Our data showed she didn’t starve and was about seven weeks old, so we feel a bit better knowing the poor little girl didn’t suffer for too long.”

What happened to Zhur’s family?

This is an age when modern grey wolves in the region have typically just weaned from their mother. By studying hair and tooth chemicals, the researchers found the pup’s mother mainly ate aquatic foods. That probably meant seasonal consumption of fish from the Klondike River, which still has a modern-day spawning population of Chinook salmon. Some wolves in Interior Alaska can get much of their summer diet from fish, making it a plausible scenario for one of their Ice Age relatives.

Wolf Mummy Discovered
The remarkable find opens a window on life in Canada’s far north when woolly mammoths roamed the Earth. (Credit: Government of Yukon)

“Normally when you think of wolves in the Ice Age, you think of them eating bison or musk oxen or other large animals on land,” says Meachen. “One thing that surprised us was she was eating aquatic resources, particularly salmon.”

An analysis of Zhur’s genome also found she is descended from ancient wolves from Russia, Siberia and Alaska — the ancestors of modern wolves. But the study, published in Current Biology, still leaves some outstanding questions about Zhur and her family – that will never be answered.

“We’ve been asked why she was the only wolf found in the den, and what happened to her mom or siblings,” says Zhur. “It could be she was an only pup. Or the other wolves weren’t in the den during the collapse. Unfortunately, we’ll never know.

“The mummified carcasses of large mammals are almost never found in Alaska and Yukon, making the opportunity to study Zhur especially rare,” she adds. “One small upside of climate change is we’re going to find more of these mummies as permafrost melts. That’s a good way for science to reconstruct that time better, but it also shows us how much our planet is actually warming. We really need to be careful.”

‘A different kind of gold’

Zhur was discovered in 2016 in the Klondike gold fields as an excavator blasted a wall of frozen mud with water, alongside the torso, head and front limbs of a caribou.

“For scientists, this is a different kind of gold,” says University of Alaska professor Matthew Wooler.

Other prehistoric creatures from that era, such as the woolly mammoth and even a species of camel, are extinct. But distant descendants of both the wolf pup and caribou can still be found wandering the Yukon.

Zhur is now on display at the Yukon Beringia Interpretive Centre in Whitehorse, Canada.

SWNS reporter Mark Waghorn contributed to this report.

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