Monster hunters of the Southern Hemisphere cfzaustralia@gmail.com
Thursday, 1 March 2012
Turning back extinction clock
The fruit of a narrow-leaved campion, buried in permafrost by a ground squirrel 32,000 years ago on the banks of the Kolyma river in Siberia, has been coaxed into growing into a new plant, which then successfully set seed itself in a Moscow laboratory.
Although this plant species was not extinct, inch by inch scientists seem to be closing in on the outrageous goal of bringing a species back from the dead.
The mammoth is the best candidate for resurrection mainly because flash-frozen ones with well-preserved tissues are regularly found in the Siberian permafrost.
Read more here.
Labels:
cloning,
extinct,
extinction,
mammoth,
siberia,
Tasmanian Tiger,
Thylacine
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