Chilean scientists recently uncovered several remains of elephant predecessors dating back 12,000 years near Lake Tagua Tagua, a glacial finger lake in southern Chile. Gomphotheres, an extinct relative of the modern elephant, roamed southern Chile thousands of years ago and might have been the target of group hunts by inhabitants of the region.
Trending
Chilean scientists discover 12,000-year-old elephant remains
More Videos
-
2026 Grammy Awards: Osbourne family pay tribute to Ozzy, announce rock and metal nominees
-
Jonathan Bailey crowned People’s Sexiest Man Alive for 2025
-
Prince Andrew is now Andrew Mountbatten Windsor after being stripped of royal titles
-
‘Witch hunt’ or ‘right decision’? Londoners split over King Charles stripping Andrew of title
-
Doug Ford tells U.S. envoy to apologize for ‘unacceptable’ comments to Ontario trade rep
-
Carney ‘looking for someone to blame,’ Poilievre says after Trump ends trade talks over anti-tariff ad
You are viewing an .
View Original Article