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Judi Lynn

(160,452 posts)
Sun Mar 19, 2023, 12:06 AM Mar 2023

24,000-Year-Old Skeletons of 7,000 Extinct Animal Species Unearthed in Chile

By Rich Co Mar 06, 2023 01:37 PM EST

Along the coasts of Chile, archaeologists and paleontologists have discovered more than 7,000 skeletons of extinct animal species, some of which date back as far as 24,000 years.

Ancestor Species
The extinct species that were uncovered were remains of Camelidae, which were ancestors of camels; Cervidae which are ancestors of deer; Equidae, which are ancestors of horses; Mylodontidae which is an extinct group of giant land sloths; Xenarthra, which is an ancestor of sloths, anteaters, and cingulatel; Canidae, which are an ancestor of dogs, foxes, and wolves; myocastorinae and octodontidae, which are two ancestors to rodents; and multiple mylodons which is another extinct type of giant sloth.

The wetlands that once covered the area where the remains were discovered were frozen between 24,000 and 17,000 years ago during an ice age. The area is now completely underwater.

The discovery of the fossils was made in the central Chilean coastal region of Quintero Bay, where researchers have been conducting excavations at a location known as GNL Quintero 1 (GNLQ1).

More:
https://www.natureworldnews.com/articles/55726/20230306/24-000-year-old-skeletons-7-extinct-animal-species-unearthed.htm







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24,000-Year-Old Skeletons of 7,000 Extinct Animal Species Unearthed in Chile (Original Post) Judi Lynn Mar 2023 OP
Thank you for sharing this utterly fascinating information. niyad Mar 2023 #1
There's so much ahead to learn, we discover daily! Thank you for "braking" to read, niyad. Judi Lynn Mar 2023 #2
Overwhelming, but exciting nonetheless. Every advance in technology unearths niyad Mar 2023 #4
Wow. If you're that big, no one's going to bother you if you're a lazy 🦥 sloth. Beakybird Mar 2023 #3
Snicker. niyad Mar 2023 #5

Judi Lynn

(160,452 posts)
2. There's so much ahead to learn, we discover daily! Thank you for "braking" to read, niyad.
Sun Mar 19, 2023, 12:19 AM
Mar 2023

It's all overwhelming, when you think about it. Doesn't seem it can ever end, either!

niyad

(113,086 posts)
4. Overwhelming, but exciting nonetheless. Every advance in technology unearths
Sun Mar 19, 2023, 12:27 AM
Mar 2023

new information about our past, which just thrills me. I remember a line from an episode of "Quantum Leap", when Sam had jumped into an archeologist. A site was buried during a sandstorm, and he says something like, "one of these days we will have the technology to find the most hidden things."

It is wonderful that we get to experience so much of this.

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