During this time, camel synonymous with desert animal. However, who would have thought, in the ancient times of about 3.5 million years ago, the camel also live in the highland forests in the cold Arctic, Canada.
Illustration of the High Arctic camel on Ellesmere Island during the Pliocene warm period, about three and a half million years ago. (Picture from: http://news.nationalpost.com/) |
Close-up of a fragment of the High Arctic camel fossil lying on the ground at the Fyles Leaf Bed site in 2008. (Picture from: http://news.nationalpost.com/) |
Research conducted by Natalia Rybczynski and John Gosse from Dalhousie University, Halifax and Mike Buckley from the University of Manchester, England, was published in Nature Communications, the online journal on March 5, 2013.
"This is an important discovery because it provides the first evidence that camels living in the highlands Arctic," said Rybczynski, Vertebrate paleontologist at the Canadian Museum of Nature. "The animal camel expand deployment in North America up to 1.200 kilometers and indicates lineage that gave birth to modern camel originally adapted to live in the arctic forest."
"This is an important discovery because it provides the first evidence that camels living in the highlands Arctic," said Rybczynski, Vertebrate paleontologist at the Canadian Museum of Nature. "The animal camel expand deployment in North America up to 1.200 kilometers and indicates lineage that gave birth to modern camel originally adapted to live in the arctic forest."
The research team's camp at the Fyles Leaf Bed Site on Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, near Strathcona Fiord during the 2008 field season. (Picture from: http://news.nationalpost.com/) |