A drama has been unfolding in the corridor outside Matthew Wooller’s lab at the University of Alaska. That’s where he and his colleagues tape up large sheets of paper mapping levels of strontium, nitrogen, and oxygen isotopes. These numbers tell the life story of a woolly mammoth that lived more than 17,000 years ago: its birth, its expulsion from the herd as it reached adolescence, its travels back and forth across the Brooks Mountains in northern Alaska, and finally its death from starvation.
That story, published today as a paper in Science, is the first to map out the life of a single woolly mammoth. It’s based on the isotopes that make up one of the animal’s tusks, which Wooller and his coauthors used to map its movements and puzzle out what it ate. This data is starting to fill in the gaps in scientists’ knowledge about how mammoths behaved, and it could be a new method for mapping the movements of other prehistoric species, as well. By giving scientists a better idea of how mammoths responded to stressors at the end of the last ice age, the research could also help them make better predictions about what will happen to today’s large mammals as global warming transforms the environment.
“It was like a soap opera emerging right in front of our eyes,” says Wooller of the chronology his team pieced together in their hallway. “It was kind of beautiful.”
Isotopes are variations on a specific element. Strontium, for example, has four stable, naturally-occurring isotopes: 84Sr, 86Sr, 87Sr, and 88Sr. Each has the same number of protons, but they have different numbers of neutrons. These isotopes are found all over the place—in rocks, water, and on the seafloor—but in site-specific ratios. That means the ratio of 87Sr to 86Sr, for example, becomes like an address for a specific area. Thousands of years ago, as the mammoths grazed on the grassy tundra, those isotopes would have traveled from the soil to their food to their bodies. “You are what you eat, isotopically,” Wooller says.
For a person, isotopes get distributed into every part of the body, from hair and teeth to bones. For a mammoth, that included the tusks, which grow from a point that attaches to the base of the skull. Every day, minerals and isotopes would have traveled through the bloodstream and been deposited at this base in layers that built up over time. Like the rings in a tree trunk, these layers provide a record of where the mammoth went during its lifetime—from birth at the very tip of the tusk, until death when layers were no longer added to the base.