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View Full Version : Woolly mammoth could be brought back to life 'within five years'



Princess Luna
4th December 2011, 05:09
Scientists believe it may be possible to clone a woolly mammoth within five years after finding well-preserved bone marrow in a thigh bone recovered from permafrost soil in Siberia.
Teams from Russia's Sakha Republic's mammoth museum and Japan's Kinki University will launch fully-fledged joint research next year aiming to recreate the giant mammal, Japan's Kyodo News reported from Yakutsk, Russia.
By replacing the nuclei of egg cells from an elephant with those taken from the mammoth's marrow cells, embryos with mammoth DNA can be produced, Kyodo said, citing the researchers.The scientists will then plant the embryos into elephant wombs for delivery as the two species are close relatives, the report said. Securing nuclei with an undamaged gene is essential for the nucleus transplantation technique, it said.
For scientists involved in the research since the late 1990s, finding nuclei with undamaged mammoth genes has been a challenge.Mammoths became extinct about 10,000 years ago.
But the discovery in August in Siberia has increased the chances of a successful cloning.
Global warming has thawed ground in eastern Russia that is usually almost permanently frozen, leading to the discoveries of a number of frozen mammoths, the report said.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2069541/Woolly-mammoth-brought-life-cloned-bone-marrow-years.html

Ocean Seal
4th December 2011, 06:29
I think I just came. Also what we need to do is not fuck up these clones, as I would think that this is going to be far harder than it actually sounds.

Zav
4th December 2011, 07:27
This is pretty cool. Hopefully this technology will be used to restore many other species humans destroyed.

Hexen
4th December 2011, 08:04
Problem is, I don't think today's environment can be sustainable to the Mammoth which is why they went extinct in the first place since evolution works by animals adapting to their environment and bringing back a animal who was a product of that environment that is maybe long gone would probably not survive long because they maybe incompatible with today's environment.

Just my hypothesis.

Smyg
4th December 2011, 09:30
Scientists believe it may be possible to clone a woolly mammoth within five years after finding well-preserved bone marrow in a thigh bone recovered from permafrost soil in Siberia.



Scientists believe it may be possible to clone a woolly mammoth within five years




may be possible to clone a woolly mammoth



clone a woolly mammoth
Yeeeeeeees! I've been waiting so long to hear this.

Buttress
4th December 2011, 10:30
Would be pretty awesome, but where would it live?

bricolage
4th December 2011, 10:41
Would be pretty awesome, but where would it live?
The Arctic?
Dunno, what did they eat?

Smyg
4th December 2011, 11:14
It would live in a zoo, obviously. I hope.

ВАЛТЕР
4th December 2011, 12:00
Meh, lemme know when they can make a real Jurassic park island.

They must've been tasty as hell since we hunted them all to extinction. Mmm mmm

thefinalmarch
4th December 2011, 12:15
They must've been tasty as hell since we hunted them all to extinction. Mmm mmm
or they could've just been and abundant/convenient source of food in a particular environment. I'm going with the latter theory.

ВАЛТЕР
4th December 2011, 12:27
or they could've just been and abundant/convenient source of food in a particular environment. I'm going with the latter theory.

I say we eat a few and see if they are any good. :lol:

piet11111
4th December 2011, 12:37
I wonder how smart mammoths where compared to elephants.

RadioRaheem84
5th December 2011, 20:29
"Your scientests were so concerned with whether they could, they didn't stop to think if they should".

Chaos theory.....:lol:

Leonid Brozhnev
5th December 2011, 20:50
Can't wait till we're all eating Do-Do burgers, riding around on our Mammoths and playing fetch with the family Europasaurus. The Flintstones may have actually been a hellish vision of the future...

Rafiq
5th December 2011, 23:43
How about we clone two? Of opposite sex that is

bcbm
6th December 2011, 17:59
Would be pretty awesome, but where would it live?

a research facility

Tim Finnegan
6th December 2011, 18:15
The Arctic?
They didn't actually live in permanent snow, that's just how we imagine them because of their hair, and the locations we tend to find them in. They had a similar habitat and lifestyle to bison and other animals like that.

xub3rn00dlex
6th December 2011, 18:18
a research facility

What? I want it straight from the cloning machine and onto my dinner plate.

The Dark Side of the Moon
6th December 2011, 18:26
hell, if they are easy to create, along with capitalism might end world hunger




this statement is sarcastic