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Woolly Mammoth Extinction Caused By Climate Change And Human Activity, 'Megafauna' Study Says

Woolly Mammoth

  First Posted: 03/ 5/2012 8:31 pm Updated: 03/ 6/2012 2:56 pm

The past few tens of millennia were hard times for the "megafauna" of the world. Hundreds of big-bodied species—from the mammoths of North America to the 3-meter-tall kangaroos of Australia to the 200-kilogram-plus flightless birds of New Zealand—just disappeared from the fossil record. A new, broad analysis continues the century-long debate over the loss of the big animals, coming down on the middle ground between blaming migrating humans for wiping them all out and climate change alone for doing them in.

As in most contentious scientific debates, uncertainties in the data have fueled the dispute over what took out the megafauna. Typically, researchers would try to pin down exactly when, say, the mammoths of North America died out, when the climate changed the fastest as the world came out of the last ice age, and, most difficult, when humans from Asia first arrived on the scene. If the extinction in a particular area seemed to coincide with severe climate change or with the arrival of humans, one or the other could be blamed. If it seemed to have been the humans, researchers assumed the new arrivals must have hunted down too many mammoths, brought a lethal disease with them, or altered the environment somehow, perhaps by too much burning.

But the case-by-case tactic has not yet carried the day for either side. So zoologists Graham Prescott and David Williams and their colleagues at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom decided to take a broader approach. In a paper published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, they lay out their analysis of the extinction of 110 genera of megafauna on five landmasses in relation to the timing of four kinds of climate change and the arrival of humans.

Story continues below slideshow.

PHOTOS: GIANT PREHISTORIC ANIMALS, 'MEGAFAUNA'

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  • Titanis walleri

    This North American bird, which stood over 8 feet tall, would have had an enormous, axe-like beak.

  • Dunkleosteus terreli

    This heavily-armored predator had the second most powerful bite of any fish.

  • Indricotherium

    The hornless rhinoceros-like creatures of this genus were the largest land mammals of all time.

  • Megatherium

    Giant ground sloths of this genus were about the size of today's elephants. The megatherium only went extinct around 10,000 years ago (right around the time when humans started farming), and smaller relatives may have survived as late as the 16th century!

  • Dinornis novaezealandiae

    Richard Owen, director of London's Museum of Natural History, stands next to the largest of all moa. Moa, which originated in New Zealand, were flightless, and some were even wingless.

  • Argentavis magnificens

    The Argentavis magnificens, an early relative of the Andean Condor, was the largest flying bird ever discovered.

  • Diprotodon optatum

    These creatures, the largest marsupials that ever lived, roamed Australia. Some scientists have suggested that stories of the supernatural 'bunyip' creature in Aboriginal folklore could be based on diprotodonts.

  • Deinotherium giganteum

    These distant relatives of modern elephants had an imposing appearance, with strange, downward-curving tusks and heights of up to 16 feet at the shoulder.

  • Leedsichthys problematicus & Liopleurodon rossicus

    The fearsome Liopleuredon, right, had a jaw nearly ten feet long. The Leedsichthys, left, was a bony fish that may have been even larger than it looked; some estimates put its maximum length at 53 feet. <strong>Correction</strong>: <em>An earlier version of this slide had the positions of the Liopleuredon and Leedsichthys reversed</em>.

The Cambridge group compiled dates from previous studies for the arrival of humans and the extinction of megafauna on each landmass: Australia, Eurasia, New Zealand, North America, and South America. And they took the temperature record locked in an Antarctic ice core as a guide to global climate change. Then they compared how well climate change and human arrivals, alone or in combination, could predict the timing and severity of extinctions on the five landmasses. To sort out the importance of timing uncertainties, they tested 320,000 different extinction scenarios. "We tested a lot of models across a huge range of human arrival times and extinction times," Prescott says. "It seems likely that both climate and human factors played a role" in most cases.

"What they found makes sense," says mammalian paleoecologist Anthony Barnosky of the University of California, Berkeley. "It makes a clear case for there being an interaction. It shows what happens when two bad things happen at once." Barnosky and environmental scientist Barry Brook of the University of Adelaide in Australia have found such a human-climate synergy operating in megafaunal extinctions when severe climate change coincided with human arrivals. A similar synergy is happening today, they say, as global warming intensifies and the human population continues to grow.

But others have concerns about the latest study—for example, the way it lumps together events occurring as much as 10,000 years apart to test for coincidence. "When you have such a challenging problem, what are you willing to ignore in the details to get the big picture?" asks ecological statistician Andrew Solow of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts. "I'm worried that too much of the detail was omitted. This is a first step."

ScienceNOW, the daily online news service of the journal Science.

WATCH: MUMMIFIED BABY WOOLLY MAMMOTH DISCOVERED

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The past few tens of millennia were hard times for the "megafauna" of the world. Hundreds of big-bodied species—from the mammoths of North America to the 3-meter-tall kangaroos of Australia to the 2...
The past few tens of millennia were hard times for the "megafauna" of the world. Hundreds of big-bodied species—from the mammoths of North America to the 3-meter-tall kangaroos of Australia to the 2...
 
 
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05:58 PM on 03/13/2012
wait..... havent i seen this movie before? if jurassic park has taught me anything its DONT BRING BACK DINOSAURS!!!! THEY WILL EAT YOU!
orange county man
guy from the OC
11:44 AM on 03/16/2012
You are spot on Pal ! Dinos equal death. Now bringing back the Dodo bird is a whole other matter. They were doofy looking giant birds. How fun would that be?
04:41 PM on 03/13/2012
This dude just released a book with cartoony megafauna. Check it: http://www.behance.net/gallery/Zoostalgia/3338093
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mj1247
this comment approved by..me
03:48 PM on 03/13/2012
republicans say there no such thing as climate change god would not let it happen,besides the earth is only 6000 years old according to christian republicans .so there no such thing as woolly mammoths..............
12:53 AM on 03/12/2012
Just a quick correction on the slideshow. Slide #9, Leedsichthys problematicus is the fish on the left & Liopleurodon rossicus the reptile on the right. The caption inverts them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
05:14 PM on 03/11/2012
i hope we bring them back some day that would be very cool
orange county man
guy from the OC
09:40 AM on 03/11/2012
I know exactly what happened to the Woolly Mammoth. As the Neanderthals became wealther what with better sticks and nicer caves, their high society wives wanted fur coats. A protest group, NETA, was formed but it was too late.
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08:44 PM on 03/10/2012
Sure are a lot of Neanderthals on this age. I guess they didn't die out after all.
10:16 AM on 03/13/2012
Nope they didn't. DNA proves that. Instead of dying out they were absorbed in to the human race. We are them and they are us.
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03:48 PM on 03/13/2012
Nope. There are a few tiny traces of Neanderthal DNA,(maybe 4%, max) but no Neanderthal mitochondria or Neanderthal Y chromosomes. The one thing that likely does survive is their contribution to our immune system. On the other hand a few of us may have a bit more Neanderthal DNA than the rest--I've always wondered about professional wrestlers.
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kilchis
We're all in this together
12:52 AM on 03/14/2012
That's not what I got from watching "The Incredible Human Journey",do you have a link for your statement? Thanks.
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people taste like crap!
06:26 PM on 03/10/2012
Titanis walleri.....This North American bird, which stood over 8 feet tall, would have had an enormous, axe-like beak....

This I think one of the many that ruled the land..... there were several in the Americas including Diatryma WITH HUGE BEAKS which ranged from 65 million years ago to about 40 million years age.....these of course were just another species of FEATHERED DINOSAURS....which by the way are still the largest species of animal on the planet...so much for the fantasy of their long ago extinction.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
01:29 PM on 03/12/2012
Ah, the terror birds.

Good times!
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people taste like crap!
09:18 AM on 03/13/2012
Good times for who? lol lol
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people taste like crap!
06:19 PM on 03/10/2012
Woolly Mammoth Extinction Caused By Climate Change And Human Activity, 'Megafauna' Study Says....

Yeah 95% human and maybe 5% climate...lets start being responsible for the destruction on this planet.........going way back to the beginning...shall we?
05:10 PM on 03/11/2012
Woolly Mammoth mmmmm sounds tasty .....yum
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people taste like crap!
10:25 AM on 03/12/2012
That's why they're gone and 7,000,000,000 humans are left...
10:21 AM on 03/13/2012
I agree that we need to be careful with the one and only planet we have, but on the other hand, I don’t think the human species is all that bad either. However, I may be a tad biased. Having to chose one species over the other I vote human every time.
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kilchis
We're all in this together
12:54 AM on 03/14/2012
Me too,but i'd like to live in a nicely balanced environment.
10:04 AM on 03/10/2012
Of course it makes sense when you come down in the middle between two opposing views - that's the point of the middle ground - especially when there are likely a host of forces involved. Having said that, worrying about details such as time depth (although traditional where evidence is generally sparse) suggests a rather hasty effort under an institutional deadline. Doing research and publishing results in a continuous flow is crucial for UK academics and institutions, as it determines the extent of government funding. It sharpens the pen, no doubt, but....
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GeneEUss
r'U.Think'n.What.I'm.Think'n?
04:19 AM on 03/10/2012
So why is the Rushlimbaughus and the Chrischristinia Sloth still around ?
05:11 PM on 03/11/2012
because all that hate makes them taste bad
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White Raven
Eyeballs are tasty
12:49 AM on 03/10/2012
I think some important possibilities have been ignored. We know that there have been supervolcano eruptions in the past, notably the Toba Eruption, which is theorized to have nearly wiped out homo sapiens. Why should that event have only had an effect upon humans and not all these other very large animals?

Also, in the ancient world it has been accepted that humans existed in relatively low populations. There simply were not enough humans to go around destroying all of these species willy-nilly if they tried. Further, anyone who's even passively studied hunter-gatherer societies knows that these people do not overhunt and treat their environment with respect. I find the concept that humans overhunted and/or destroyed all of these ancient species completely implausible.

Lastly, as Noble9 correctly points out, most of the animals in the slideshow died out prior to the appearance of homo sapiens.

If this is a 'science' article then I'm afraid someone needs to spend a little less time on 'science' and a lot more on critical thinking.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
01:45 PM on 03/12/2012
Toba erupted about 70 K ybp. Not at the close of the Pleistocene, which is when Mammoths and Mastodon were going extinct.

As to the population hypothesis, you're incorrect. Relatively small bands of hunters can quickly decimate a local population of mammoth. Then, the grasslands, already under the pressure of climate change begin to revert to woodland, driving the margins of livability for the mammoth even further north (this is because mammoth were the primary mechanism, at least in Europe, whereby grasslands were being maintained...they trampled the ground, grazed everything down to a stubble, and uprooted small trees).

The hunters followed the mammoth, creating ever more habitat loss. Mammoth social groups were likely small, like with modern elephants. Remove a few senior members, and the group knowledge of migration routes, water sources, salt deposits and all of the other necessities of life dissapears. Many mammoths, especially younger ones, may have starved, or fallen into swamps, etc.

The theory is supported by the fact that the youngest mammoth fossils are also the most northerly and remote. It seems that the species made its last stand about 7K ybp in a group of islands off Siberia.

Your line about hunter-gatherer societies treating the land with respect is simply poppycock. Sure, the impact of this type of technology is lighter, but it is a narrow fiction based in the mythology of the noble savage that spawns such "thinking".
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White Raven
Eyeballs are tasty
04:57 PM on 03/12/2012
Okay, so explain to me why the North American bison numbered in the many millions in spite of the constant subsistence hunting done on them by the Native Americans for thousands of years? Explain to me why elephants and other megafauna of Africa didn't get hunted to extinction and were not endangered up to and until big game hunters with firearms and hunting tactics having to do with trophy taking and bounty killing?

You can sing "poppycock" all you like but I just don't see the evidence that actual hunting cultures drive their prey into extinction. We're not talking about just mammoths going extinct here. We're talking about mammoths, mastodons, indricotherium, giant sloths, and many other species of non-predatory megafauna. I think the idea that humanity in its infancy went all over the world annihilating everything with such success is silly.

As for the idea about mammoth social groups, we have only speculation for that. These are good thoughts but has there been any evidence to support that? I'm not saying this is impossible, merely that I haven't seen it.

And dating Toba doesn't dispel the notion that there have been cases of naturally induced catastrophic climate change in the past. I think more attention should be paid to the other volcanic activity in the world over time as well as cosmic events such as asteroid or comet impacts, which could induce sudden environmental changes.

The case against nature-induced mass extinction events has not been adequately made.
12:52 PM on 03/13/2012
Some very sound points, White Raven. It occurred to me that perhaps the humans moved to these continents because the climate was becoming friendlier to them but far less suited to cold-loving woolly mammoths and other Ice Age beasts. For once, humans were probably coincidental to animal extinction.
07:23 PM on 03/09/2012
Major problem with the slideshow is that 6 out of the 9 animals pictured died out before humans appeared.
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
01:46 PM on 03/12/2012
Major problem with your observation?

The slideshow isn't really related to the article.
01:31 AM on 03/13/2012
My point exactly.
07:16 PM on 03/09/2012
Not sure how anyone can doubt the impact of humanity on the planet. Look out your window: how many wolves and bison do you see? How many 500-year-old trees? When was the last time you looked at a body of water and could see the bottom clearly?

Guaranteed that whatever you see out your window looks a lot different than it did 1000 years ago because of humans.
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
01:47 PM on 03/12/2012
I miss seeing the 500 year trees out my window...people living in Vancouver near the park used to have that privilege...a windstorm took out most of them a few back.
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kilchis
We're all in this together
12:59 AM on 03/14/2012
What you had is one of Joni Mitchell's proverbial "tree museum"s,we need wide,viable slices of ecosystems. "Don't it always seem to go that you don't know what you've got 'til it's gone?"
orange county man
guy from the OC
11:45 AM on 03/16/2012
I see dead people.
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buckydumpster
owns "They Live" sunglasses
05:00 PM on 03/09/2012
About 1/2 of the posts on this story are really funny, and yet sad too.