It's like a Game of Thrones direwolf, only smaller and creepier. A 40,000-year-old severed Pleistocene wolf's head has been discovered in eastern Siberia -- and the permafrost that preserved it also kept its teeth and fur pretty much intact.
Still snarling after 40,000 years, a giant Pleistocene wolf discovered in Yakutia.
— The Siberian Times (@siberian_times) June 8, 2019
Sensational find of head of the beast with its brain intact, preserved since prehistoric times in permafrost.https://t.co/w4FoRB16Ur pic.twitter.com/8QbthEfay1
According to the Siberian Times, the head was found by a local resident, Pavel Efimov, in 2018, though photos were not released until now. The wolf is believed to have been between 2 and 4 years old when it died. The head is 40 cm (15.7 inches) long and the brain is intact.
The discovery is an international affair. Japanese scientists dated the head as more than 40,000 years old, and scientists at the Swedish Museum of Natural History will study its DNA.
"This is a unique discovery of the first ever remains of a fully grown Pleistocene wolf with its tissue preserved," Albert Protopopov, from the Republic of Sakha Academy of Sciences, told the newspaper. "We will be comparing it to modern-day wolves to understand how the species has evolved and to reconstruct its appearance."
Although the discovery itself happened last year, it was announced in early June at the opening of a woolly mammoth exhibit at the National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation in Tokyo. Scientists also displayed the body of what the Times called "an immaculately-well preserved cave lion cub," also preserved by permafrost. The cub was no more than a month old when it died, the Times reported back in 2018 when the cub was first displayed.
First pictures of newly-discovered 50,000 year old cave lion cub found perfectly preserved in permafrost. Baby - around one month old when it died, too young to open his eyes - was found by local resident in Yakutia https://t.co/SJ4OolVnXK pic.twitter.com/Q9aXz73jBr
— The Siberian Times (@siberian_times) September 12, 2018


