TY - BOOK AU - Ukraintseva,Valentina V. TI - Mammoths and the environment SN - 9781139225328 (ebook) AV - QE882.P8 U47 2013 U1 - 569/.670957 23 PY - 2013/// CY - Cambridge PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Mammoths KW - Paleoclimatology KW - Holocene KW - Russia (Federation) KW - Siberia KW - Paleobotany KW - Extinction (Biology) N1 - Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 24 Feb 2016); Part 1. Introduction. 1. Some pages of history ; 2. Materials and methods ; 3. The mammoth faunal complex -- Part 2. The mammoth fauna : unique discoveries in Siberia. 4. The Berezovka mammoth ; 5. The Taymyr mammoth ; 6. The Selerikan horse ; 7. The Mylakhchin bison ; 8. The Shandrin mammoth ; 9. The Kirgilyakh mammoth ; 10. The Khatanga mammoth ; 11. The Yuribei mammoth ; 12. The Jarkov mammoth ; 13. The mammoth fauna of the Berelekh River basin -- Part 3. Solving the mysteries of the late Pleistocene environment and fauna. 14. Food remains of fossil herbivorous mammals, and floras of the past ; 15. The vegetation and climate of Siberia in the late Pleistocene and Holocene ; 16. Why did the mammoths die out so quickly? ; 17. Conclusions N2 - The study of fossilised remains of herbivorous animals, particularly those rare findings with well-preserved gastrointestinal tracts filled with plant remains, is crucial to our understanding of the environment in which they lived. Summarising thirty years of research, Ukraintseva presents evidence on plants once eaten by Siberia's major herbivorous mammals. The collection of pollen and plant spores from food remains sheds light on the vegetation of these ancient habitats, enabling researchers to reconstruct local floras of the time. This also promotes further insight into the causes of the extinction of various species due to changing environmental conditions and food availability. Providing a history of the research undertaken, the book also includes specific chapters on the Cherski horse and bison, along with the vegetation and climate of Siberia in the late Anthropogene period, making it a lasting reference tool for graduate students and researchers in the field UR - https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139225328 ER -