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

The sabretoothed feline cub is nearly little sufficient to keep in one hand, but its discovery after 32,000 years is a memorable occasion for palaeontologists.

It was around 3 weeks old when it died in what is now northeastern Russia - and the permafrost has actually kept it well-preserved ever since.

Researchers from the Academy of Sciences in Yakutia in the Far East state it is a special find.

No place else has it been found in such good conservation said the academy's Aisen Klimovsky who co-authored a paper on the cub published in the journal Scientific Reports this month.

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

This is the first find that will show the world what they truly looked like, said Klimovsky of the Department for the Study of Mammoth Animal at the institute in Yakutsk, the regional capital.

It unlocks nature's huge trick, so to speak.

Researchers stumbled upon the cub four years ago while digging for massive tusks near the Badyarikha river in Sakha, also known as Yakutia and Russia's biggest republic.

Bordering the Arctic Ocean, Yakutia is a vast region of swamps and forests bigger than Argentina, around 95% of which is covered in permafrost.

Rising global temperatures brought on by climate modification are melting much of Russia's permafrost, revealing animal stays and other ancient traces. Earlier this year, scientists at the Yakutsk institute were able to study a 44,000-year-old wolf carcass pulled from the melted tundra.

The cub becomes part of the homotherium genus, which lived throughout North America, Eurasia and Africa from around 4 million years back to 12,000 years earlier. The animals were about the size of lions when complete grown and are known for their serrated upper incisors.

Albert Protopopov, head of the Mammoth Fauna department and a co-author of the Nature paper, stated the discovery would be a. advantage to palaeontologists worldwide.

It's a genuine sensation, he informed Reuters.

(source: Reuters)