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Oldest polar bear bones ever found
One of the most extraordinary finds in Svalbard was made during a geology student excursion to Prins Karls Forland in 2004. The jawbone found then is now announced to be the oldest remnant of a polar bear ever discovered.

There are not many fossils of a polar bear in the museums worldwide. They are rarely found and the evoltion of polar bear is poorly known. The bears spend most of their lives on sea ice and only occasionally their bones are preserved in terrestrial sediments.

The mandible found by students was dated to be 130 000 - 110 000 years old - that's the oldest known remnants of a polar bear in the world. The bone belonged to a fully grown male bear which had size comparable to polar bears living in the Arctic today. As the jawbone is extremely well preserved it is possible to extend the range of analyses. The work is supervised by professor Ólafur Ingólfsson from the University of Iceland and professor Øystein Wiig from the University in Oslo.

Source: UNIS news: The oldest remains of a polar bear ever discovered

Read more: Spectacular find could rewrite polar bear history (UNIS news)

References: Ingólfsson, Ólafur and Wiig, Øystein: Late Pleistocene fossil find in Svalbard: the oldest remains of a polar bear (Ursus maritimus Phipps, 1744) ever discovered. Polar Research, Volume 28, Issue 3 (December 2009), pp. 455-462. DOI: 10.1111/j.1751-8369.2008.00087.x

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The subfossil left mandible of a polar bear found in Svalbard is well preserved. (Photo: Ólafur Ingólfsson).

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