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Woolly mammoth caught on video? It looks fishy

Woolly Mammoth found alive in Siberia? VISIT THIS CHANNEL http://www.youtube.com/user/LivingHistorySchool?feature=mhee.

Footage has emerged of what appears to be a woolly mammoth fording a river in a remote part of Siberia. Despite being believed to be extinct for over 10000 years, the film, apparently taken by a Russian engineer in the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug region,

They were thought to have died out 4000 years ago, but a video has emerged which some people claim shows a woolly mammoth — though others insist it's a hoax. Shot in the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug region of Siberia

They were thought to have died out 4000 years ago, but a video has emerged which some people claim shows a woolly mammoth — though others insist it's a hoax. Shot in the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug region of Siberia

By James Sheldon on February 10th, 2012 It has long been accepted that the Woolly Mammoth, aka the big, hairy elephant, has been extinct for some 10000 years. But this new video that has surfaced from the harsh climate of Siberia has intrigued everyone

Woolly mammoth caught on video? It looks fishy

A video is circulating with what appears to be a woolly mammoth crossing a river in Siberia. Do you think it's real? Watch and judge for yourself.

Unfortunately, all signs point to this one being yet another blurry fake.

An engineer in Siberia caught what some are saying is a woolly mammoth on video last summer, and the media is having a field day with it. According to The Sun, scientists believe the last of them died out 3500 years ago.

They were thought to have died out 4000 years ago, but a video has emerged which some people claim shows a woolly mammoth — though others insist it's a hoax. Shot in the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug region of Siberia

A video is circulating with what appears to be a woolly mammoth crossing a river in Siberia. Do you think it's real? Watch and judge for yourself.

Woolly mammoth caught on video? It looks fishy

A BEAST lurches through icy waters in a sighting a paranormal investigator thinks could prove woolly mammoths are not extinct after all. The animal — though

A woolly mammoth was reportedly spotted in Siberia; and the amazing sighting was all caught on tape! Is this the final proof that these legendary beasts are still alive? According to reports, a government worker was out surveying for a road that was

By Cecil Adams • February 10, 2012 A friend insists a team of scientists is dedicated to cloning a woolly mammoth. I'd love to believe this is true, and if it is, what are the plans for these critters? Zoos? Releasing them into the wild? Farming?

Posted at io9 from a report in the sensationalist rag The Sun, the snippet is said to show a living woolly mammoth crossing a river in Siberia. Humbug. The blurry video appears to show a brown bear with a fish in its mouth – the flopping, dangling fish

Open rehearsals, Version 2.0: Last month, Woolly Mammoth skated onto thin ice by announcing a plan to let a limited number of visitors into rehearsals for “Civilization (All You Can Eat)” that they could Tweet about. Playwright Jason Grote hadn't

Woolly mammoth caught on video? It looks fishy

By Benjamin Radford Life's Little Mysteries contributor According to a story in The Sun newspaper, a new video has surfaced that seems to show a live woolly mammoth — an animal the scientists say has been extinct for about four millennia.

But you probably didn't expect that one of the writers of “Smash” would be Jason Grote, the man behind Woolly Mammoth's “Civilization: All You Can Eat,” a play that features a character named Big Hog and ponders the question: “Does humanity have an

By Mike Perlman on February 9, 2012 in Photography, Reviews In the Photography world, 35mm, or “full frame” is the standard by which nearly all cameras are judged. Focal lengths, crop factors and other camera traits are all based on the 35mm equivalent

Even though it's still impossible to clone a Woolly Mammoth we may not need to — because a Woolly Mammoth has been spotted and captured on tape in Siberia. Behold the undeniable proof that the Mammoth lives — or that

By Cecil Adams • February 10, 2012 A friend insists a team of scientists is dedicated to cloning a woolly mammoth. I'd love to believe this is true, and if it is, what are the plans for these critters? Zoos? Releasing them into the wild? Farming?

Woolly mammoth caught on video? It looks fishy

Even though it's still impossible to clone a Woolly Mammoth we may not need to — because a Woolly Mammoth has been spotted and captured on tape in Siberia. Behold the undeniable proof that the Mammoth lives — or that

"Some have dismissed it as a hoax while others reckon it is an elephant lost in the Siberian wilderness. The third theory is the sighting shows a bear eating a huge fish." —Is this a woolly mammoth? Is this a woolly mammoth?!

Posted at io9 from a report in the sensationalist rag The Sun, the snippet is said to show a living woolly mammoth crossing a river in Siberia. Humbug. The blur.

By Cecil Adams • February 10, 2012 A friend insists a team of scientists is dedicated to cloning a woolly mammoth. I'd love to believe this is true, and if it is, what are the plans for these critters? Zoos? Releasing them into the wild? Farming?

Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company announced its first “Tweet Up” last week. Three of its Twitter followers will be selected to attend the first, technical and final dress rehearsals of Jason Grote's new play, “Civilization (all you can eat).