Updated
Updated · Science News Magazine · Jun 9
DNA From 13 Yukon Squirrel Pellets Reveals 700,000-Year-Old Ice Age Ecosystems
Updated
Updated · Science News Magazine · Jun 9

DNA From 13 Yukon Squirrel Pellets Reveals 700,000-Year-Old Ice Age Ecosystems

3 articles · Updated · Science News Magazine · Jun 9

Summary

  • Thirteen frozen ground-squirrel pellets from Yukon yielded DNA that let researchers reconstruct ancient diets, habitats and squirrel lineages across roughly 700,000 to 17,000 years.
  • The oldest sample—nearly 700,000 years old—appears genetically distinct from modern Yukon squirrels and may represent a previously unknown species, pointing to a later population turnover.
  • Dietary DNA showed the squirrels ate widely, including grasses, willows, beetles and grasshoppers, plus traces from mammoths, bison, wolves and ancient horses—likely from scavenging or bone-chewing rather than hunting.
  • That omnivory turned the coprolites into ecosystem archives: the team reconstructed mitochondrial genomes from 24 animals, including 12 squirrels, two bison, three horses and six mammoths.
  • The pellets came from permafrost-preserved burrows exposed by Yukon gold mining, suggesting overlooked feces can capture richer Ice Age community snapshots than isolated bones alone.

Insights

What does a squirrel eating a mammoth reveal about the lost world of the ice age?
If ancient feces can rewrite history, what other 'facts' about the past might be completely wrong?