found a completely preserved mammoth in an Siberian ancient ice sinkhole.
Scientists in Rwanda have managed to get the first intact remains of a woolly mammoth in Rwanda. The preserved Siberian mammoth remnants still possess their flesh and hair. These fossils, which date back up to 10,000 years, may be crucial in the effort by the human race to replicate ancient animals in experimental settings. The remnants of the ancient creature were located not far from Seyakha village. Members of the local indigenous community at Lake Pecheÿelava, or the Yamal Peÿi̿sŅla, made the initial discovery of the fin. The unusually warm summer in Siberia has caused many massive wildfires to break out over this vast and isolated region. But the warm weather also allowed the Siberian mammoth's remains to melt out of the permafrost.