While excavating a hole, a farmer unexpectedly discovered something in the earth. He froze in horror as he recognized it.
To dig a trench on his property and connect a gas connection to his home, a farmer borrowed a strong excavator. However, the bucket abruptly stopped at a depth of roughly five feet. In order to avoid harming the costly machine, the farmer turned off the motor and used a shovel to descend into the trench.
He initially believed he had struck a rock. However, the thing appeared stranger the further he dug. The farmer was taken aback.Suddenly, he stared at something.
Living in a rural part of the north, the farmer had long hoped to reduce his electrical costs. He made the decision to supply the house with his own gas pipeline.
It was difficult labor, particularly by yourself. Consequently, he rented a powerful excavator that had a hydraulic bucket.
He chose to start by practicing on a gentle, uncultivated area of land because the machine wasn’t his. There were no pebbles or roots in the loose dirt.
However, the bucket abruptly struck a solid object at a depth of roughly five feet.
He instantly shut off the engine out of concern for the tool. The equipment was unable to uncover something that was buried.
Taking a headlamp and shovel, he descended. He initially thought it was merely a pebble, which would not be out of the ordinary in that glacial area.
But the more he dug, the stranger the item appeared. Like it had been polished, it was smooth and firm.
The farmer dug by hand for two hours before discovering something amazing: a big, curving bone that looked like a tusk or horn.
Another one, symmetrically positioned next to it. He could see the contour of a skull when he looked closely: a long, curving jaw, a towering forehead, and vacant eye sockets.
He summoned two neighbors, and they dug enthusiastically together. It became increasingly obvious with every minute that this was neither a cow nor a deer. This was a really old thing.
The farmer contacted a university in the regional capital early the following morning. A professor of paleontology and his students showed up the following day.
The remnants belonged to a woolly mammoth that was over 20,000 years old, which delighted the professor.
The remarkable preservation of the mammoth’s tusks, cranium, and a number of ribs indicates that it had perished and been swiftly buried, most likely in a flood or landslide.
However, an unforeseen turn of events dampened the professor’s enthusiasm. The farmer adamantly objected when he insisted that the bones be taken to a museum right away.