Scientists studied a three-week-old saber-toothed cub dating back 35,000 that had been left almost perfectly intact, thanks ...
This remarkably well-preserved cub could help scientists answer questions about sabertooth anatomy, hunting, and even coat color.
It was identified by the authors of the study as belonging to the species Homotherium latidens and had many differentiations from a modern lion cub of a similar age. The shape of the muzzle ...
The mummified cub, belonging to the species Homotherium latidens, was discovered in 2020 in permafrost on the banks of the Badyarikha River in Yakutia, Russia's Siberia region. The findings were ...
A true glimpse into the Ice Age. This specimen, belonging to the species Homotherium latidens, exhibits a rare state of conservation. Researchers, in awe, identified dense dark brown fur, front paws ...
A new scientific study announced that a 35,000-year-old mummified saber-toothed cub was discovered northeast of Yakutia, Russia, in 2020.
CT scans were done to confirm the animal’s species—Homotherium latidens—the final line of saber-toothed cats on earth. Homotherium latidens died out over 10,000 years ago after the end of ...
Historically, most Late Pleistocene fossils of Homotherium have been concentrated in North America, where over thirty localities have yielded specimens traditionally classified under the species H.
Radiocarbon dating puts the cub, of the Homotherium latidens species, in the Late Pleistocene period, according to the researchers. The remains contain the head and the anterior part of the body ...
The mummy is the first evidence from Asia of the saber-toothed cat species Homotherium latidens, Lopatin said, though fossilized bones were previously found at sites in the Netherlands and in the ...
The mummy is the first evidence from Asia of the saber-toothed cat species Homotherium latidens, Lopatin said, though fossilized bones were previously found at sites in the Netherlands and in the ...
A member of the species Homotherium latidens, the cub was discovered in 2020 in the Republic of Sakha in eastern Russia. This region can see temperatures as low as minus 90 degrees, according to NASA.