By Laura Geggel, Senior
Writer | November 14, 2017 04:08pm ET
A Russian man hunting for mammoth
tusks in Eastern Siberia made an unexpected discovery in September: the
incredibly furry, slightly squished mummy of a cat from the last ice age.
Scientists are celebrating the rare discovery, but they're not certain on one
major point — whether the mummy is a cave
lion cub or a lynx kitten, paleontologists told Live Science.
If the kitten is a lynx, it would
be only the second species of its kind from the last ice age to be uncovered in
Beringia, a region encompassing parts of Russia, Alaska and Canada, said Olga
Potapova, the collections curator and manager at the Mammoth Site of Hot
Springs, South Dakota, who is helping with the logistics of studying the new
specimen.
People have spent at least 300 years
collecting and studying frozen bones and mummies in Eastern Siberia, and
"that yielded just one fossil bone of this [lynx] species," Potapova
told Live Science in an email. So, "the find of the complete mummy of this
species would be very surprising and interesting," she said. [Photos:
Is Ice Age Cat Mummy a Lion or a Lynx?]
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