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tv   [untitled]    September 19, 2011 8:31pm-9:01pm EDT

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pristina seized of the disputed checkpoints from local control leading to a point of nato troops to keep the peace the serbian majority in the north and feel their rights are being violated by the most. we take you to the frozen expanses of russia's far east where archaeologists have been finding well preserved remains of . the shore of the seal before it's. one of the most extreme regions of russia you can get to the most remote parts of two and from. these researches are off to what may well turn out to be a sensation they know that something unusual has been found on the banks of one of the rivers in the country's north the scientists want to see whether the find is indeed as unique because they have been led to believe if it turns out to be true
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the scientific community will get an intriguing glimpse to what life was like thousands of years ago. expedition will travel across western chukotka a northeastern yakutia a wealth of remains of extinct animals dating back to the ice age is hidden beneath the permafrost none of the fossils and tusks have been found here. however the find that the researches are off to is something special a prehistoric bison completely mummified by nature. of which some forty mummified animal remains have been found in the world since biology became a science two hundred years ago some twenty of them are more or less in good condition all the others are just fragments legs skulls and the like are only two bison have been found over the years one in alaska and the other here you know from
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what i've seen that much more is left of this one this is why it is more valuable for research which is. some time ago geologists found in a raid of mammoth fossils in this out of the way part of russia. it was the world's first and most large scale expedition of its kind scientists believe the area is full of relics from the late place to see any park that period came to an end some eleven thousand years ago at approximately the same time the last remaining mammoths died out on the rest of the continent leaving behind that tusks from a kind. of material which in this organic tooth tissue called ten team is really remarkable stuff at the gipper and this is the launch front tooth from a mammoth. it was an extraordinary animal the people who live thousands of years ago were aware of its useful properties. they use the stuff to make the first tools
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utensils even works of on people have always been fascinated by the material that we think. which a cut courageous village of a new east has a population of about five hundred and a situated on the banks of the mali and really river. nearly all the villages that spend the brief summer in the tundra anti-god tending reindeer hunting and fishing from here the expedition heads for the site where the primitive bison was found. to divide the shores to do what the man who steers the boat tells you that it was the propeller made brush against the river bed in shallow places but if that happens don't panic the people know the lay of the land well and they'll tell you what to do if need be it stood. here you can easily get around by water people mostly use lightweight boats for the purpose but explorers should be aware of the difficulties that local rivers have in store.
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there are geologists biologists and paleontologists among expedition members travelling to this remote cold environment has been a cherished ambition for many of them. since its formation several thousand years ago the mallee a new a river has kept many secrets about the ice age in no way in its banks. is the company there is an abundance of animal fossils here would you even if people were to come from all over to dig them up it would take several years to finish the job bring on. the expedition camps out on a patch of land by the river. the cliff where the bison mummy was found is across it it's some local saw the animal when they were travelling past the place by boat at that moment a huge chunk of permafrost collapsed into the water to reveal the mom of five
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corpse to find was immediately reported to fyodor should love skiing he is officially licensed to collect paleontological objects in this area it was fielder who organized the expedition and prepared a camp for field research. she would then you know she today i think that we need to inspect the place and just relax a bit before we would like to move to that side. of the beauty we'll do it he worked in the evening everybody will come up with a plan of their own and we'll correct everything. tagging along with the expedition is our county should love ski both the son of the organizer and the youngest member of the group before the others arrived he had already gathered a huge number of ancient fossils found in the area the group has taken a lively interest in his collection. this is a bison hoard. preserved because it was kept in a natural freezer. thanks
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a lot arkady let me shake your hands well done. work like that for another two days and then we'll send you back home. at the moment this one squat interesting it's a mammoth it's still points are divided into three sections which points to its very old age such plates are often found in early elephants. the only mammoth is an extinct member of the elephant family during the ice age woolly mammoths lived in most areas of eurasia or north america. they isn't trunks were smaller than those of modern day elephants but their tusks were much larger. it is speculated that such mammoths lived in groups led by older females current theory suggests that they became extinct due to climate change and over hunting. the last moments left in the late pleistocene ipad.
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today this is a free to take a stroll in the park dating back to the place to see an era it's the result of the efforts of scientists. who fenced off one hundred sixty square kilometers of forest tundra shrubs lakes and swamps the park is situated seventy kilometers from the expedition's field come in your course is ne the arctic ocean is only one hundred fifty kilometers away. the question of the water in the bog that was here fifteen years ago never dried up today there is grass here is of course is because the grass when it is the least twenty twenty five centimeters long to figure for bison is fourteen centimeters it can be assumed therefore the bison nibbled at the lower grass level as the trail behind a horse's. zimm of aim is to reconstruct what he calls the mouth step.
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this ecosystem was predominant in the optic of the late place to seen huge herds of large herbivores such as mammoths woolly rhinos reindeer horses bison used to graze here. why many of the species died out approximately ten thousand years ago is still unclear another ice age came to an end around the same time it gave way to swamps and to address the ecosystem of mt to steps in the north had completely changed and she would you few today's climate to you would suit mammoth steps of. i.q. and seen my mind to animals creating pastures for themselves with these horses and bison hadn't seen one another for twelve thousand years but their genetic memory tells them after just a couple months of that they do you know one another and you will recall the
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mammoth two are there they come that's the least thing we want they'll do are everything around here. two members of the expedition i live missy and field of their job is to look for mammoth tusks eleven field who are together almost all the time when it comes to looking for fossils they parted ways near one wants to share his secrets with the other. there is steep slopes all along the bank everybody knows that mammoth tells can be found here although many people are on the lookout few actually find any obviously have got some secrets to keep what you need in his job his determination. the first step is a careful inspection of the steep slopes from a boat. is a tributary of the river a column on each spring rain and water from melted snow flood the tributaries over flowing water washes the bank away forcing permafrost to retreat as
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a result big chunks of rock tumble down into the water to expose ice bound missions deep inside. the mcdonald's not first of all you must know what it looks like. you should look forward everywhere. i dream about finding a mammoth's goal. that's my aim you know after all others have found such things. only people whose job is looking for tusks know the telltale signs of where they hide shallow waters of the best place for tusk come to. with a great stroke of luck has found a tusk of impressive size. this one is easy to carry it only weighs above thirty kilograms.
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rain has brought work at the burial site to an abrupt halt life in the camp has come to a stop so. welcome to the church the lebanese grade plutonium is turned into a vital new resource nuclear waste becomes a fuel friendly to the environment and energy a lot of the ends of the earth russian scientists lead the way in making these innovations a reality imagine a future free from fears of nuclear on the lips of the peaceful revolution in the comic energy on technology. we've got the future covered.
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when there was a lot of sunshine in the grass and flowers close stronger with each passing day. when the icy nice with the bison being found melted away mummified animal was instantly moved into an ice house. and we think we're about to enter a unique place it's a gift to people from the northern climates permafrost makes it possible to store food to see if it's a remarkable place there's nothing special about this small ice house but it is unique nonetheless you know we get to see something even more exciting in science.
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the corridor and cells of the ice house were hollowed out by hand inside an enormous ice formation the walls and floor i'm a device each year they're sprayed with water ventilation is checked at the same time this makes it possible to maintain the low temperature and humidity. it's very unusually warm this summer in chicago. by permafrost began to degrade and rapidly melt away and we feared we might lose the bison buried in it. consequently members of my team moved it to this ice house as fast as possible we had what we could lead specialists instantly try to find out what caused the animals death the bison tail stands upright instead of being pressed against the body. this in direct sign may indicate that quickly suffocated many others have
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theories of their own. about what was only sure that they might have died when the spinal cord or skull was suddenly fractured. in other words it might have been buried under falling rock or more also it could have fallen through a crack and. when we were moving it into this cell i was saddened to see that one of its horns had been severely damaged i do you know rourke there's a crack at the bottom of the boat. and that means that the skull must have suffered a serious injury. either this happened after its death or it was the cause of it's to. look at the bullet with us chances are something helped it landed a natural trap. but it's possible that we know that lions were around here at the time it's true permafrost has done an excellent job of preserving the bison soft tissues and even characteristics mel gibson pretty strong smell there yes it
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smells like a cow from just. as far as can be seen there are no major injuries on the bisons body according to a tentative assessment the bison died during the pleistocene period its body has spent around thirty thousand years in permafrost than the big usual floored scientists are delighted to see that here the bison is in the sort of environment that existed thousands of years ago but that will do what you want to some of them are working on the bank today. he would know they're out to get as much information as they can and when he was there on the front line as it were. in the summer heat has radically changed the shape of the cliff where the prehistoric bison was found two scientists have learnt that boat not far off on the fied mammoths burial place. we do know with. this is where the normally fully poisonous . as found we need to establish when and how the animal died and the natural
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environment there was typical of that period. do you agree. the cleft contains clay with peat streaks in it this is the best material for radio carbon measurements radio carbon dating will help establish the period when the bison lived clay accumulated during cold periods where as peat formed when the climate became warm. or she was disturbed this is pete here you can find anything you like dross insects and little twigs. from the bison may have been in a bog like this one but you. and will need to find out whether this kind of peas. is also on the other side of the bank or. do you think the ripples in this formation date back to those times and i'm sure they do it highlights the relief of the period between the period when our bison lived. in
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a lake with ripples and that the bison was in a nice situation in one of the pete's top players one thing is crystal clear it was not a natural death otherwise insects would have eaten not the bisons body scientists speculate that after the bison died mud quickly enveloped his body and saved it from predators and the natural deep freeze prevented it from decomposition. it's possible that our bison might have been swept away by floodwaters and brought here. that you were there or does it most of being too weak to resist the flow at that for. i thought also the small amount of peat here points to a boarding process is about watching it with the body was in fact in a swamp. so he might have drowned innit.
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ancient fossils of mouth tusks found in this area are unique materials for bone covers. this is a standard carving workshop it contains a wealth of natural specimens and manmade figurines. the moment we were vere mammoth tusks more than any other bones with their valuable if only because they were underground for thousands of years before somebody chanced upon them. them would you know and the objects we make from them will survive for hundreds of years to delight people. therefore we treasure mammoth tusks. but don't call this qantas forward to make the stakes a full tea cup cannot be undone all compositions are unique works of art it is impossible to fake or imitate each object costs
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a lot of money nearly all of the world's monex connoisseurs and wealthy collectors own traditional figurines of mammoths made from tusks the moment the mammoth tusks and fossils are best preserved in permafrost the woody frozen earth begins thawing it just decomposes. it was in its authority but just ceres riding in the permafrost like this one are absolutely intact because when the with a sort of misused. this is one of the permafrost areas. a scientist founded the northeastern research station the rocky bank of the colin model river it takes four and a half hours by end to get to the nearest city ziman flora tree attracts scientists college students from all over the world. they're interested in studies of permafrost and mammoths and of a. the fact that the station is far removed civilization nearly every summer
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college students come here from the united states to work on various international projects. where i live is actually claimer own as well but where you go to school the city says that. that's the way. pleistocene park is one of sir gazin offs most ambitious projects in recent years he has been doing his best to bring in various species of the reforms. these young elks are in for a long journey from a small pen to freedom. easy easier if you could take the word showcase there you go. you hear people. here. looking for it that's it. that's well done
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a few good years if they've been around for a month one of the elks was a very sick and we had to work hard to nurse him back to health. now that there are fewer mosquitoes here there it's going to be released into the poor. place to seem pock is at the very heart of permafrost forty kilometers from the station. during the summer it can only be reached by boat the elks are transferred to the motorboat with most cat. is enough is always at the wheel on such occasions. this is not the first time that he has used the small motorboat to transport tunnels. near the place. live as the world's least accessible point economically speaking or the method of transport
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costs more than anywhere else we brought the musk buffaloes by motor boat from bronco island where. the young adults have become accustomed to humans and learn to trust them for that reason they patiently wait for the chance to go free. puck staff carry the animals by hand from the bank to the pen. but the full they are led into the wild it will go through a period of a climatized nation. so gays him off believes that the bulls can survive in these rigorous conditions moreover they can radically change the landscape. over a good that should be an open landscape he would scatter tribes blue shoes for
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trees tiny bergson lakes sent the stream to grass why do they mow the grass in the parks you may ask that's because there were millions of herbivores in the old days your that there where you have a cup ras was there staple food it's the sort of landscape that man is used to i'm comfortable here i'm trying to recreate the natural environment in which my distant ancestors lived. so cool the arctic steps existed in the north thousands of years ago an abundance of food attracted mammoths and other herbivores here early man quickly followed suit. today most of the people living in this rugged region of mine precious metals.
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this is a gold mining field in chukotka in russia's far east ironically ages because of the gold industry that now months have been found scraping off the top layer of permafrost in search of mineral wealth revealed these prehistoric names but sometimes they emerge naturally. that people don't know why permafrost sometimes looks to forms it's because there's a foreign object lying underneath which has been there for tens or even hundreds of thousands of years and all the sudden permafrost begins spirit out in the end the object shows up in the midst of tundra. that a place of several millimeters a year. over the course of many years the majority save unique prehistoric objects have been found in the permafrost they have been dug up in the russian far east
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altai on the southern europe's. these remains of a woolly rhino case there bison among the five horse legs and a complete one year old mammoth give us an idea of what these prehistoric animals look like. the fossils of primitive predators and herbivores provide unique material for studying animal d.n.a. from the ice age. the number five to called kabul is widely different from old known fragments of prehistoric hoofed animals. scientists of concluded that it is the world's most complete mummy of a bison it is much better preserved the blue baby the famous mummy of a bison found in alaska. at the summer. this is
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a true scientific sensation such finds are absolutely unique when something similar is found it is just fragments in most cases but this is a perfect carcass of a museum we can get an idea of what it looked like what was inside its body and what he ate shortly before his death and much more. the next scientific expedition to this cold harsh environment may well result in another subsection of find remains of a cave lion been found close to the site where the bull died.
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all.
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as fierce fighting continues in libya french lawyers are gear up for a battle of their own by trying to prosecute president sarkozy with a war crimes over the military intervention the alleged nato used to depleted uranium shells and bombs of residential buildings causing civilian deaths including children and the air campaign goes on with anti cut off the forces still struggling to take the loyalist to the cities of syria and bani walid. probably stein's a bid for statehood it gains worldwide support and made threats the u.s. will block the move in the u.n. palestinian president mahmoud abbas is to request full un membership during his speech to the general assembly on friday the world bank and the i.m.f. say the palestinian autonomy is already economically strong enough to stand on its own feet. but he un belgrade to seek a diplomatic solution to the intense standoff in northern kosovo between ethnic serbs and post for obedience overboard.

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