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It is now known to be that of an Ice Age woolly rhinoceros.
The week also brought stories of literal revival — involving Little Ice Age plants and perhaps Big Ice Age woolly mammoths — photographs of chemical reactions, diminished radiation worries in Japan, and astronomy meeting social media.
To some, the arched snout and horns of skeletal Ice Age woolly rhinoceroses suggested not a vast land mammal, but the beak and claws of a giant bird.Baron Cuvier, a 19th-century zoologist, thought the unicorn not only mythical, but impossible, for its single central horn would have to grow out of a suture in the skull.
During the Younger Dryas age, woolly mammoths briefly expanded into north-east Europe, whereafter the mainland populations became extinct.
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It is smaller than an ice-age woolly rhino, but recognisably similar.
In particular, though its horn has been lost, the place where it was attached to its skull is flanked by the sort of crest associated with the flat horns of the ice-age woolly rhino.
"It smacks of new-age woolly ideas for some people.
In this study we report the first complete mitochondrial genome sequences of the extinct ice-age woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis), and the threatened Javan (Rhinoceros sondaicus), Sumatran (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis), and black (Diceros bicornis) rhinoceroses.
Drawn in vigorous black lines by an artist in the ice age, a woolly mammoth shakes hairs that hide its face and vaunts slender tusks that reach almost to the ground.
Editor's Note: This article was updated at 11 45 a.m. ET August 19 to correct the age when woolly mammoths existed.
8 P.M. (Fox) ICE AGE -- A woolly mammoth, a sloth and a saber-toothed tiger rescue a human infant while the planet freezes over.
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