The puppy was discovered last year by locals in Yakutia, said Sergey Fedorov, who heads the exposition hall at the Mammoth Museum of Russia's North-Eastern Federal University. Dogor left the wilderness as a lump of soil and ice, but scientists could make out the head and paws of what they believed at first to be a young wolf.
Federov told the Washington Post that he carefully cleaned off dirt and debris to reveal near-intact fur - "extremely rare for animals of that time period."
"It's an amazing feeling, to see, touch and feel the history of earth," he said.
The puppy, whose name was announced earlier this week, remains in Russia. But he has caught the attention of researchers in Sweden and England who want to better understand Dogor's life and place in a still-mysterious evolution.
Testing on a rib bone has revealed the animal's age: about two months, said Stanton, a postdoctoral scholar who's been working for over a year on a broader attempt to answer lingering questions about canine history.
The analysis also put Dogor's short life at a particularly interesting period of time, right around when many wolf lineages were going extinct and dogs are thought to have emerged. Exactly how and when they evolved from wolves is unclear; one recent study estimates between 20,000 to 40,000 years ago.
The fact that testing can't tell whether Dogor is wolf or dog gives further evidence for a link to both species, scientists say.
"As you go back in time, as you get closer to the point that dogs and wolves converge," Stanton said, "[it becomes] harder to tell between the two."
Stanton said he and his colleagues need to do more analysis on Dogor's genome to increase their confidence that they have sequenced it correctly. Their work is just starting.
Luckily for them, just like the puppy's coat and teeth, the DNA is well preserved.