On a farm in Buenos Aires, Argentina, the owner of the estate was turning over the land for the next round of sowing as the crops withered. While turning over the land, suddenly the excavator jammed, as if there were large stones underground. The owner of the manor went down to check it out, and as a result, he saw a black clump, he pulled it with his hand, and found that he couldn't move at all, and this thing should not be small.

He dug open with a hoe to see that it was a section of an elephant's teeth, and he continued to dig down, and found that the teeth were unexpectedly large. What could be a novel creature? He thought about it and called the police. The police sent relevant personnel to help, and it turned out that this large piece of tooth was likely to be fossilized, and in order to prevent it from being destroyed, they invited relevant experts. What would it be?
Under the guidance of relevant experts, with the help of large equipment, continue to excavate. After a while, the entire fossil was excavated, although scattered on the ground, it was not difficult to see that there were teeth, spines, and torsos. After analysis, it was actually a mammoth fossil.
Because there is so little material, the reason for its death cannot be accurately judged, but it can be roughly speculated that it is likely to die because of human carnage. Judging by bone age, it should have died before 12,000 years, and its limbs had already been eaten.
Once one of the largest elephants in the world and one of the largest mammals ever survived on land, the steppe mammoth weighs up to 12 tons. But for some reason, it went extinct one after another before 11,000 years. If it weren't for this chance, the fossil would have been sleeping underground.