Museum of North launches Adopt a Mammoth program
Jeff Richardson
907-474-6284
Aug. 25, 2022
The 汤姆视频 is inviting the public to go woolly mammoth hunting.
The encourages sponsorship of each of the roughly 1,500 teeth, tusks and bones in the University of Alaska Museum of the North鈥檚 collection. A $350 donation will pay for radiocarbon testing to date the fossil, and a lab in Sweden will offer free DNA analysis for each adopted specimen to determine its sex and other genetic characteristics.
The larger goal is to find the 鈥測oungest鈥 mammoth 鈥 a specimen from 10,000 years ago or more recent. This would extend the date of extinction on the mainland to a period well after the earliest people arrived in Interior Alaska.
鈥淭hat would be a real change in understanding how these animals existed,鈥 said Patrick Druckenmiller, the museum鈥檚 director. 鈥淚t would be pretty amazing to have this huge and unique data set.鈥
Only a small number of mammoth specimens in the museum鈥檚 collection are currently dated.
The 鈥測oungest鈥 dated mammoth in mainland Alaska so far is about 11,600 years old, but there are reasons to believe the massive animals were around more recently. A remnant population on neighboring St. Paul Island.
Participants in the Adopt a Mammoth program will receive a photo of their specimen, updates on testing and a chance to name the fossil. When testing is complete, the donor with the youngest fossil will receive a trophy. The winner also can appear in a photo with their specimen in the museum during the announcement period.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a fun philanthropic project, but it鈥檚 also rooted in solid science,鈥 said Matthew Wooller, the director of UAF鈥檚 Alaska Stable Isotope Facility and the leader of the Adopt a Mammoth project. 鈥淚f we find a young mammoth fossil on the mainland, that鈥檚 big news.鈥
Find more information about the program on the .
ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Matthew Wooller, 907-474-6738, mjwooller@alaska.edu
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