Incredible Cheetah Mummies Show Big Cats Once Roamed the Arabian Peninsula
NEWS | 16 January 2026
The naturally mummified remains of dozens of cheetahs hidden deep in caves in Saudia Arabia shed light on where the animals lived in the past, which might inform rewilding efforts I agree my information will be processed in accordance with the Scientific American and Springer Nature Limited Privacy Policy . We leverage third party services to both verify and deliver email. By providing your email address, you also consent to having the email address shared with third parties for those purposes. Researchers have discovered the naturally mummified and skeletal remains of 61 cheetahs, which were hidden deep inside caves in northern Saudi Arabia for hundreds, and in some cases thousands, of years. The find indicates that these big cats roamed the Arabian Peninsula for millennia before they disappeared from the landscape between 49 and 188 years ago—evidence that bolsters an effort to rewild the region with modern-day cheetahs, according to Ahmed Boug, general director of the National Center for Wildlife in Riyadh. He is lead author of a study detailing the findings that was published on Thursday in Communication Earth & Environment. Of the 61 cheetahs found, seven were naturally mummified—dried and preserved by the Saudi Arabian desert. Boug and his colleagues carbon dated two of these specimens and five of the skeletal remains, with the oldest having lived some 4,000 years ago and the youngest having lived about 130 years ago. On supporting science journalism If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today. Courtesy of Ahmed Boug They also sequenced the genomes of three of the seven sampled specimens. The older cheetah remains were more genetically similar to a Northwest African subspecies, whereas the more recent cheetah remains were more similar to the Asiatic cheetah, which is now mostly confined to a very small population in Iran. “It was a big surprise,” Boug says. He and his colleagues had suspected the remains would show more similarity with Asiatic cheetahs, because members of that subspecies have been sighted in Saudi Arabia in the past century, and their habitat today is geographically closer than Northwest Africa. But the findings suggest that wasn’t always the case. “There appears to have been a change in what subpopulation was present or dominant in the region over time, not stable coexistence as far as we can see,” he says. “The geographic story is something we are continuing to tease out.” The study doesn’t answer why cheetahs disappeared from Saudi Arabia. Climate change was not likely a factor, Boug says, because the landscape has been harsh and arid for thousands of years. Instead he attributes the big cats’ dwindling presence to human pressures, both from poaching and the encroachment of industry and residential areas on formerly wild areas. In turn, Boug hopes the research can help inform rewilding efforts in the kingdom, including the possible reintroduction of the big cats to the landscape. “The key insight from our discovery is that more than one subspecies of cheetah inhabited Saudi Arabia,” Boug says. “That opens the field considerably to how cheetahs are sourced and the implications of introducing diversity into the gene pool.”
Author: Andrea Thompson. Claire Cameron.
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