Mexico mammoths: Human-built woolly mammoth traps found in Tultepec
- Published
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The traps were around two metres deep and 25 metres wide
At least 14 woolly mammoth skeletons have been uncovered in Mexico in traps built by humans about 15,000 years ago.
The two pits in Tultepec north of Mexico City are the first mammoth traps to be discovered, officials say.
Early hunters may have herded the elephant-sized mammals into the traps using torches and branches.
The recent discovery of more than 800 mammoth bones could change our understanding of how early humans hunted the enormous animals.
Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) says more traps could be uncovered in the area north of Mexico City, external.
Archaeologists thought early humans only killed mammoths if the animals were trapped or hurt.
However, INAH's discovery of the human-built traps could mean such hunts were planned.
Diego Prieto Hernández, director of the institute, said the discovery "represents a watershed, a turning point in what we until now imagined to be the interaction between hunter-gatherers with these huge herbivores".
The two pits are about 1.7m (5ft 6in) deep and 25m in diameter. Excavations at the site have been taking place for 10 months.
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Some of the bones showed physical signs of being hunted
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Mammoths are thought to have been the same size as modern day elephants
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824 bones have been recovered from the archaeological site
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The remains were found during excavations for a waste containment site
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