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Millions of years ago, the wildlife used to be much more varied in East
Anglia, with hyenas, bears, monkeys, wild boar, horses, bison, giant
moose, rhinoceros and elephants. The West Runton Elephant was discovered
in an area, which is known as the Cromer ridge, a belt of sand and
gravel debris stretch's from Cromer to Holt. This ridge was made up
by melting ice flows, at the end of the last Ice Age (quaternary period)
which was about four million years ago.
At this time England was in the grip of an arctic climate with ice
sheets, several kilometers thick, extending over most of Britain, as far
south as North London.This means that the West Runton Woolly Mammoth had
lain buried for between 600,000 and 700,000 years under thousands of
tons of rock in a cliff face.
The first bones were unearthed in December 1990, though the actual
retrieval was not launched until January 1992. First to be found were
the ribs, jaw, backbone and part of a leg. In 1995 the major excavation
work took place, to recover the rest of the skeleton.This was carried
out by the Norfolk Archaeological Unit. Some of these bones can now be
found in the Cromer Museum in Cromer.
The height of the elephant when alive was estimated at four meters
weighing in at about 10 tons, which is nearly twice the weight of a
modern African elephant. It was aged around forty years at its death.
As the dinosaurs had become extinct many millions of years earlier, the
elephants were one of the larger beasts amongst land animals, at that
time.

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