Strong evidence for dietary mineral imbalance as the cause of osteodystrophy in Late Glacial woolly mammoths at the Berelyokh site (Northern Yakutia, Russia)

Paleoecological analysis of over 1500 mammoth remains from the famous non-archaeological Berelyokh site (∼13–12 ka BP) has demonstrated that ∼ 42% show destructive changes (osteoporosis, osteolysis, osteofibrosis, osteomalacia, articular diseases and others). For the first time, non-closure of cervi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Quaternary International
Main Author: Leshchinskiy, Sergey V.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2017.02.036
https://openrepository.ru/article?id=292036
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Summary:Paleoecological analysis of over 1500 mammoth remains from the famous non-archaeological Berelyokh site (∼13–12 ka BP) has demonstrated that ∼ 42% show destructive changes (osteoporosis, osteolysis, osteofibrosis, osteomalacia, articular diseases and others). For the first time, non-closure of cervical vertebral foramina transversaria and loose intra-articular bodies have been recorded in mammoths. The overall pathological picture resembles that of Kashin-Beck (or Urovskaya) disease, the etiology of which is associated with mineral starvation. The alimentary (dietary/nutritional) character of the observed osteodystrophy can be explained by the strong acidification of geochemical landscapes, which is manifested in the territory of Northern Eurasia after 30 ka BP and especially clearly during the Late Glacial (∼15–10 ka BP). Thus, the Berelyokh site reflects the terminal stage of the last mass extinction of large mammals.