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Russian scientists hail discovery of 32,000-year-old sabre-toothed cat cub

A remarkably well-preserved cat cub, tens of thousands of years old, was discovered in Russia’s permafrost

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The 32,000-year-old sabre-toothed tiger cub, which was found by Russian scientists in the Siberian permafrost. Photo: Academy of Sciences Yakutia via Reuters

The sabre-toothed cat cub is almost small enough to hold in one hand, but its discovery after 32,000 years is a momentous event for palaeontologists.

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It was around three weeks old when it died in what is now northeastern Russia – and the permafrost has kept it well-preserved ever since.

Scientists from the Academy of Sciences in Yakutia in the Far East say it is a unique find.

“Nowhere else has it been found in such good preservation” said the academy’s Aisen Klimovsky who co-authored a paper on the cub published in the journal Scientific Reports this month.

The 32,000-year-old sabre-toothed cat cub (top), compared with a cub of the Barbary Lion, which is an extinct subspecies of the lion. Photo: Academy of Sciences Yakutia via Reuters
The 32,000-year-old sabre-toothed cat cub (top), compared with a cub of the Barbary Lion, which is an extinct subspecies of the lion. Photo: Academy of Sciences Yakutia via Reuters

Unlike previous skeletal specimens unearthed in Texas, this cub still has its dark brown fur.

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