An employee of Vienna’s Museum of Natural History works on the tusk of a mammoth.—AP
An employee of Vienna’s Museum of Natural History works on the tusk of a mammoth.—AP

VIENNA: An Austrian museum team has recovered two giant tusks and other remnants of what experts say are apparently the remains of a rare mammoth breed, after construction crews unearthed them while working on an Austrian freeway. The find, dating back to mid-August, was reported by Austrian media on Monday.

They cite officials of Vienna’s Museum of Natural History as saying the tusks are about two meters (more than 8 feet) long and apparently come from a mammoth that lived more than a million years ago.

That precedes the more well-known wooly mammoth, which was hunted by ancient humans. Also found at the site 50 kilometres north of Vienna were parts of the animal’s vertebrae. Museum expert Oleg Mandic describes the discovery as “pretty sensational.”

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2016

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