Hunters Find a Frozen 10,000-Year-Old Baby Woolly Rhino

A baby wooly rhino was found in the Siberian ice by two Russian hunters.
A woolly rhinoceros trudges through the snow Pleistocene epoch.
Daniel Eskridge/Stocktrek Images/Corbis

In the epoch before striped dresses, the Internet was ruled by baby animals. Likewise, our Pleistocene ancestors were no doubt enthralled by the menagerie of little woolly mammals that once roamed the Earth---at least until climate change drove them to extinction. Now, as their icy tombs melt away, researchers are rediscovering those baby behemoths, and the latest little charmer that's thawed is Sasha, the baby woolly rhino.

Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Sakha

Admit it, the little fella is pretty cute for spending one hundred centuries frozen in the ice, getting chewed on by scavengers. In September, two hunters boating down a stream in Siberia noticed some wavy, auburn locks poking out of the permafrost---a dead reindeer, they thought. After realizing their mistake, they liberated the rhino's body from the thawing soil and stored it through the worst of the winter. Last week, they delivered the body to the Sakha Republic Academy of Sciences.

Sasha is one of the few woolly rhinos yet discovered, and the only calf. Experts estimate she was just 18 months old when she died. Her discovery should help researchers better understand woolly rhinos' living conditions, how they developed as they grew, and how they're related to living rhino species.

Even though some Siberian predator has chewed off Sasha's backside, the half that was buried in permafrost is largely intact. In addition to the skeletal leg, torso, and head, the calf has an ear, an eye, teeth, two horns, and a big flap of wool-covered skin. Perhaps most important, it might also still contain DNA. If scientists can recover an intact sample, they'll be able to determine which species of (for-the-moment) living rhino is most closely related to the extinct woollies.

The two hunters posed with Sasha and researchers at the Sakha Republic Academy of Sciences on Feb. 25. This is probably the least sad picture of hunters standing next to a baby rhino that you'll ever see.

From the left, Valery Plotnikov, Albert Protopopov, Ivanov Simeon, Alexander Banderov, and Aisen Klimovsky.

Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Sakha