He died in the prime[1] of life, a tiny red flower
lodged[2] in the long hairs of his thick pelt. That was more than
20,000 years ago, when woolly mammoths roamed the Siberian plains. Now, like an Ice Age emissary, Jarkov (named for the nomad family
who found him) may help us unravel some of the mysteries of pachyderm
life back then. This fall, French explorer Bernard Buigues led the first
international expedition to salvage an entire mammoth, whose fur, organs
and soft tissues remain remarkably preserved by the permafrost.Russian diggers spent five weeks chipping the carcass from its
icy tomb; a daring[3] helicopter airlift then transported the 23-ton
block 150 miles to cold-storage caverns in northern Siberia.There, scientists intend to examine Jarkov and the soil around
him for clues about the environment and what might have caused the species
to become extinct. (source: LIFE January, 2000)