Lugovskoe, Western Siberia: A Possible Extra-Arctic Mammoth Refugium at the End of the Late Glacial
Author
Orlova, Lyobov A.Zenin, Vasily N.
Stuart, Anthony J.
Higham, Thomas F. G.
Grootes, Pieter M.
Leshchinsky, Sergei V.
Kuzmin, Yaroslav V.
Pavlov, Aleksander F.
Maschenko, Evgeny N.
Issue Date
2004-01-01Keywords
absolute ageArctic region
Asia
bones
C 13 C 12
C 14
carbon
Cenozoic
Chordata
Commonwealth of Independent States
dates
Elephantidae
Elephantoidea
Eutheria
extinction
isotope ratios
isotopes
Lugovskoe Russian Federation
Mammalia
Mammuthus
Mammuthus primigenius
N 15 N 14
nitrogen
Pleistocene
Proboscidea
Quaternary
radioactive isotopes
refugia
stable isotopes
Tetrapoda
Theria
upper Pleistocene
Vertebrata
West Siberia
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Orlova, L. A., Zenin, V. N., Stuart, A. J., Higham, T. F., Grootes, P. M., Leshchinsky, S. V., ... & Maschenko, E. N. (2004). Lugovskoe, Western Siberia: a possible extra-Arctic mammoth refugium at the end of the Late Glacial. Radiocarbon, 46(1), 363-368.Journal
RadiocarbonDescription
From the 18th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Wellington, New Zealand, September 1-5, 2003.Additional Links
http://radiocarbon.webhost.uits.arizona.edu/Abstract
Eleven woolly mammoth bone samples from Lugovskoe (central West Siberian Plain, Russia) were radiocarbon dated in 3 laboratories: Institute of Geology, Novosibirsk; Oxford University, Oxford; and Christian Albrechts University, Kiel. Each laboratory used its own protocol for collagen extraction. Parallel dating was carried out on 3 samples in Novosibirsk and Oxford. Two results are in good agreement. However, there is a major discrepancy between 2 dates obtained for the third sample. The dates obtained so far on the Lugovskoe mammoths range from about 18,250 BP to about 10,210 BP. The Lugovskoe results thus far confirm the possibility of woolly mammoth survival south of Arctic Siberia in the Late Glacial after about 12,000 BP, which has important implications for interpreting the process of mammoth extinction. The site has also produced the first reliable traces of human occupation from central Western Siberia at the Late Glacial, including unique direct evidence of mammoth hunting.Type
Proceedingstext
Language
enISSN
0033-8222ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1017/S0033822200039667