James Brady+FollowWoolly Rhino Found in Alaska?!A real-life Ice Age plot twist: scientists just dug up a woolly rhino in Alaska’s permafrost—the first ever found in North America! This ancient beast, complete with preserved hair and skin, proves these mega-rhinos crossed the Bering Land Bridge from Eurasia. The find is a game-changer for understanding Ice Age wildlife and how climate shifts shaped the world. Imagine stumbling on a 40,000-year-old, furry giant in your backyard! #Science #IceAge #WoollyRhino1689Share
megangibson+FollowGold Miner Finds Baby Mammoth!Imagine digging for gold and unearthing a 30,000-year-old baby woolly mammoth instead! That’s exactly what happened in Canada’s Yukon. This little mammoth, named Nun cho ga, is so well-preserved you can still see its skin and toenails. Scientists are geeking out because it could reveal secrets about the Ice Age, mammoth extinction, and even what these giants ate for lunch. Plus, the local Indigenous community is helping protect this incredible find. Seriously, history just got way cooler! #MammothDiscovery #IceAge #Yukon #Science394Share
Melvin Mosley+FollowThose 'Ice Age Puppies'? Total Wolves!Thought scientists found ancient puppies in Siberian ice? Plot twist: they’re actually wolf siblings from 14,000 years ago! Not only did these pups chow down on woolly rhinos (talk about a wild diet), but DNA shows they weren’t early dogs at all—just a now-extinct wolf pack. Their black fur even fooled researchers into thinking they were proto-dogs. The mystery of how dogs became our BFFs just got even deeper! #IceAge #Wolves #ScienceNews #Science270Share
megangibson+FollowWoolly Rhino Found in Alaska?!Ice Age plot twist: scientists just dug up a super well-preserved woolly rhino in Alaska’s permafrost—the first one ever found in North America! Not only does this mean these furry giants roamed way farther than we thought, but the rhino’s hair, skin, and even stomach contents are still intact. It’s basically a prehistoric time capsule, and it’s rewriting what we know about Ice Age megafauna and their wild journeys across continents. Can you imagine seeing one of these in the flesh? #IceAge #Paleontology #WoollyRhino #Alaska #ScienceNews #Science41Share
Richard Vaughan+FollowIce Age Meltdown = Mega Earthquake?!Just learned that when the last ice age ended, melting ice didn’t just raise sea levels—it literally sped up the movement of Earth’s crust! Researchers found that the planet’s plates shifted way faster, even making the Mid-Atlantic Ridge bigger and triggering more volcanic activity around Iceland. Wild to think that today’s melting ice could set off similar underwater volcanic chaos. Kinda makes you rethink what climate change could unleash next, right? #EarthScience #ClimateChange #IceAge #Volcanoes #MindBlown #Science16968Share
frazierdanielle+FollowIce Age Bear Skull Found—Jaw-Dropping!A team exploring a hidden cave just stumbled on a perfectly preserved Ice Age bear skull—like, 32,000 years old and still intact! This thing is massive (think: bigger than any modern bear) and gives scientists a wild look at how these ancient giants lived, what they ate, and even how they survived the crazy climate swings of the past. Bonus: the cave had signs of both bears and early humans, so who knows what else they’ll find! #IceAge #Paleontology #CaveBear #History #ScienceFinds #Science50Share
qgonzalez+FollowIce Age Humans Hiked the Pyrenees?!Turns out, Ice Age humans weren’t just surviving—they were trekking across the Pyrenees mountains with kids, tools, and even seashell bling! Archaeologists found thousands of flint tools at a high-altitude site, proving these ancient clans used mountain passes as meeting spots and trade routes. The wildest part? They traced some flint all the way from southwest France, showing these folks were serious travelers. Who knew the Pyrenees were the OG crossroads? #Archaeology #IceAge #History #Pyrenees #Prehistory #Discovery #Science100Share