4 Bizarre Relics Found Buried in the Arctic Circle So Far

4 Bizarre Relics Found Buried in the Arctic Circle So Far
The coldest permanently inhabited places on Earth are found in the Arctic Circle, but thanks to the difficulty of living in and exploring the polar regions, there's plenty up there that's long been forgotten. Now though, slowly we are getting to grips with the history of the frozen N This is unveiled and today we're taking a closer look at four of the most bizarre relics found buried so far in the Arctic Circle. Do you need the big questions answered? Are you constantly curious? Then why not subscribe to unveiled for more clips like this one and ring the bell for more thought provoking content? In 2015, news broke that a new type of hadrosaur had been unearthed deep in the heart of Alaska. Commonly nicknamed Duck Billed Dinosaurs, the hadrosaurids were a group of herbivores alive during the late crestaceous period, which lasted from 100 million years ago, all the way up to the asteroid strike that ultimately killed the dinosaurs 66,000,000 years ago. It's rare, however, to find dinosaur fossils so far north. The discoveries of fossils in parts of Alaska within the Arctic Circle have been raised many questions among paleontologists. As far as we know, Earth was very warm during the Cretaceous period, with oceans boasting tropical temperatures around the world and ice unable to form on the planet's poles. But it would still have been significantly colder at the poles than across the rest of the Earth. And hadrosaurs are remarkably large dinosaurs to live in such a cold place. So how did they get there? For decades it was thought that dinosaurs, like most modern reptiles, were cold blooded. Scientists now believe this isn't true, and that they were actually somewhere between being cold blooded and warm blooded, but it's still interesting to see them in such frozen climes when they relied on the environment and on specific adaptations to manage their temperature. Hadrosores were grazers, so there had to have been far more vegetation in the Arctic Circle at the time that they were alive, with some fossils seemingly revealing species of hadrosaur wholly unique to the Arctic. Then, within just this one field of research, we're discovering that our own planet was once even more alien than we ever imagined. Next, a relic that was lost far more recently than the age of the dinosaurs, and an entirely different part of history coming into view. In 2016, a group of Russian scientists revealed that they'd found a secret Nazi base on a remote Arctic island. It's named Schatzgraver, meaning treasure hunter in English. The base is built on Alexandra Land, an island out in the seas of the North Pole above Russia. As far as we know, it was first sighted by English explorer Benjamin Lee Smith in 1880. He named it after Alexandra of Denmark, who was married to the future King Edward the 7th and serving as Princess of Wales. Five years later, a British expedition set foot on the island, but Alexandra Land was never considered especially important until the Nazis decided to build a weather station there in 1943. The Nazis built a lot of top secret weather bases all over the world during the height of 1/3 Reich, including as far West as on the island of Labrador in Canada. The treasure hunter base, though rediscovered by Russia, had an unfortunate ending. Unfortunate for the Nazis, that is where all who were stationed there got sick after eating raw polar bear meat. There was no food shortage that led them to this decision, just a cook who didn't realize it wasn't safe to make a steak tartar from a polar bear. Everybody who ate the meats developed trichinosis, a disease caused by parasitic roundworms, and the base had to be evacuated in the following decade. The Soviet Union also established a weather station on the island. However, the earlier Nazis had left behind a minefield. Apparently German veterans tried and failed to alert the Soviets to the mines. They weren't removed until the 1990s when the Norwegian Polar Institute got involved. Fast forward to today and this derelict Nazi base is now being studied by historians. It isn't the only relatively modern isolated settlement abandoned up there in the Arctic either. In 1998, the small town of Pyramiden, built by the USSR was also slowly abandoned by its people. For decades it had been a coal mining town, although only around 1000 people live there when it was at its most populous. Eventually it proved too incredibly hostile to stay there and immensely isolated, but today it stands as an interesting relic of a bygone era. But of course, humans have lived elsewhere in the Arctic for thousands of years, as some major archaeological finds have revealed. One example is the Yana society, who lived in Siberia but were only discovered by modern day researchers in the early 2000s. They're so named because the site attached to them, deep in the wilderness and littered with traces of people past, is on the banks of the Yana River. It's sad to think, but the reason we've been able to make the Yana discoveries, and indeed many other discoveries in the Arctic, is because of climate change. Previously, relics of the ancient Yana had been buried in ice and incredibly difficult to stumble upon and access. But as the world warms up and permafrost begins to melt at the poles, we're able to unearth what was once hidden from view, long lost artifacts from an ancient community. Until the discovery of the Yana, it was believed that humans hadn't lived in the region of Siberia until around 14,000 years ago. But the DNA strands extracted from the teeth of human remains now date back as far as 31,000 years ago. This means that humans were living in the Arctic Circle even during the last Ice Age, which is certainly impressive given how extraordinarily cold and difficult it must have been. Zooming further out. And because Eurasia is a continuous landmass, humans have been able to spread remarkably far over a far longer period of time than we once thought. The Yana society is believed to have been made of hunter gatherers who sometimes haunted mammoths for food and ivory. But some other things uncovered in their newfound DNA, such as the apparent lack of inbreeding among the Yana, suggests that they weren't the only people living across this region. There may have been many societies containing hundreds of people living alongside each other. Then as of 2022, we're still studying the things that Yana left behind and trying to unravel the story to find what this society may have looked like. And interestingly, ancient Paleo Siberians shared DNA with Native Americans, meaning that people who eventually settled in North America may have also lived in this remote corner of Siberia 10s of thousands of years ago. But finally, and not dissimilar to the discovery of the Yana people, we've found many ancient mummies throughout Siberia too. The most famous of these is the Siberian ice maiden, found in the Republic of Altai in the 1990s, buried in an underground chamber alongside her horses. She belongs to the ancient Pazaric culture that disappeared more than 2000 years ago. The ice Maiden became a symbol of Altai and culture, and the local people weren't happy when the Russian authorities took the maiden to be further studied, especially as they slightly damaged the mummy in the process. Other mummies have been found here as well, however, including some on the border of the Arctic Circle wearing copper masks. In this case, their graves contained 11th century Persian artifacts, despite their resting place being extremely far away from Persia, which is Iran today. These mummies have been studied for years, but they still hold a lot of mystery. For example, their skulls are shattered, and it's not clear why. Some suggest that their bodies may have been left in this condition as part of a kind of ritual to prevent spells emanating from them. Ultimately, though, we don't know why these people were buried like this, or even really where they came from. They may have been based in the Arctic, or simply passing through on their way to somewhere else. Similarly, the remains of an ancient Greek Scythian warrior were also found in Siberia in 2003, A man who suffered a painful death after being shot with an arrow. Siberia's coldness means that the remains we find are extremely well preserved even after thousands of years, and so history is now unfolding there more vividly than almost anywhere else. Though it's been occupied for millennia, the people and animals who have lived in the Arctic Circle remain both mysterious and intriguing, thanks to their incredible resilience in this most dangerous climate. But those are four of the most bizarre relics found buried in the Arctic Circle. What do you think? Is there anything we missed? Let us know in the comments. Check out these other clips from Unveiled and make sure you subscribe and ring the bell for our latest content.
  • https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/4-bizarre-relics-found-buried-in-the-arctic-circle-so-far/vi-BB1lf3x5

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