Chinese scientists say penguins date back 14,600 years
Beijing -- A study by Chinese scientists in East Antarctica has shown that penguins existed in the region 14,600 years ago, 6,000 years earlier than previously thought.
The study was conducted by a research team from a laboratory co-founded by the State Oceanic Administration and the University of Science and Technology of China.
The research in the Vestfold Hills in East Antarctica found deglacial sediment dating back 15,600 years, and sediment of penguin excrement and dirt dating back 14,600 years. This shows that penguins immigrated there around 1,000 years after the ice sheet melted, and the population kept growing.
The results are important for research into the evolution of seabird breeding grounds in polar regions, the positioning of penguin shelters during the last deglaciation and penguin migration in Antarctica.
- First-ever cross-boundary torch relay held for National Games
- New cultural landmark starts trial operation in Shenzhen
- China, Russia to deepen practical cooperation in humanities cooperation
- New quality productive forces gather steam to turbocharge future growth
- Shenzhen named host city for APEC 2026 as China champions cooperation, green growth
- China to launch new-generation crewed spaceship in 2026































