Monday 23 August 2021

World’s northernmost Palaeolithic settlement found on Kotelny island in the Arctic

By Olga Gertcyk, Anna Liesowska, 19 August 2021

The northernmost human site of the Palaeolithic era. Picture: The Siberian Times

Ancient hunters butchered woolly mammoths at Taba-Yuryakh site some 26,000 years ago.

Experts have confirmed that ancient hunters resided on Kotelny, off the coast of Yakutia, at 75°20′N 141°00′E, a remarkkable 990 kilometres (615 miles) north of the Arctic Circle.

Their butchering tools have been found alongside multiple bones of extinct woolly mammoths.

Scientists have restored 70% of the skeleton of one Palaeolithic mammoth on which these hardy people were feasting.

‘This is a unique event for the Arctic and world archeology,’ said Alexander Kandyba, senior researcher at the Stone Age Archaeology Department of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography, part of the Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences.

‘The mammoth was butchered by people. A large number of processed bones and tusk fragments were found. There are linear cuts, traces of chopping blows on the vertebra. People used a wide range of tools for cutting.

'There is not a single bone that would be without traces of human impact.’

He emphasised: ‘We are talking about the northernmost human site in the Palaeolithic era.’



Stunning discovery was made during a joint expedition this summer by the Academy of Sciences of Yakutia and the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography in Novosibirsk

This northern outpost affords scientists an understanding not only that man had conquered such northern latitudes but how he existed.

'In particular, we now know how they butchered a mammoth,’ he said.

A view that ancient humans were reluctant to hunt the huge hair monsters appears confounded by the new finds.



‘A large number of processed bones and tusk fragments were found. There are linear cuts, traces of chopping blows on the vertebra. People used a wide range of tools for cutting. There is not a single bone that would be without traces of human impact’. 
Pictures: Innokenty Pavlov/The Siberian Times

Dr Albert Protopopov, head of the department of mammoth fauna of the Academy of Sciences of Yakutia, said 70% of a newly found mammoth had been collected.

A large number of tusk fragments were found, indicating processing of the animal’s remains.

He confirmed: 'At the moment, the Taba-Yuryakh site is the northernmost known place of human existence in the Palaeolithic era.’

Kotelny is the largest of the islands of the Novosibirsk archipelago, washed by the Laptev Sea and the East Siberian Sea.

Previous woolly mammoth remains have been found here.




Earlie scientific expeditions to the Kotelny island. 
Picture: Innokenty Pavlov/The Siberian Times

However, at the time these ancient humans populated this outpost, it was joined to the mainland and the climate, while northerly, was milder than nowadays.

A full scientific journal report on the exciting new finds is being prepared which will include evidence of human settlement here.

The discoveries came during a joint expedition this summer by the Academy of Sciences of Yakutia and the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography in Novosibirsk.


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