PDA

View Full Version : Wooly Mammoth to be cloned inside 5 years! DNA found!



TheNocturnalEgyptian
6th December 2011, 01:13 AM
http://news.discovery.com/animals/woolly-mammoth-cloned-111205.html#mkcpgn=rssnws1

click link for all the hyperlinks

http://blogs.discovery.com/.a/6a00d8341bf67c53ef015437e2f8bb970c-640wi

Within 5 years, a woolly mammoth will likely be cloned, according to scientists who have just recovered well-preserved bone marrow in a mammoth thigh bone. Japan's Kyodo News first reported the find. You can see photos of the thigh bone at this Kyodo page.

Russian scientist Semyon Grigoriev, acting director of the Sakha Republic's mammoth museum, and colleagues are now analyzing the marrow, which they extracted from the mammoth's femur, found in Siberian permafrost soil.

NEWS: All About the Ice Age

Grigoriev and his team, along with Japan's Kinki University, have announced that they will launch a joint research project next year aimed at recreating the enormous mammal, which went extinct around 10,000 years ago.

Mammoths used to be a common sight on the landscape of North America and Eurasia. One of my favorite papers of recent months concerned the earliest known depiction of an animal from the Americas. It was a mammoth engraved on a mammoth bone. Many of our distant ancestors probably had regular face-to-face encounters with the elephant-like giants.

The key to cloning the woolly mammoth is to replace the nuclei of egg cells from an elephant with those extracted from the mammoth's bone marrow cells. Doing this, according to the researchers, can result in embryos with mammoth DNA. That's actually been known for a while.

NEWS: Prehistoric Dog Found With Mammoth Bone in Mouth

What's been missing is woolly mammoth nuclei with undamaged genes. Scientists have been on a Holy Grail type search for such pristine nuclei since the late 1990's. Now it sounds like the missing genes may have been found.

In an odd twist, global warming may be responsible for the breakthrough.

Warmer temperatures tied to global warming have thawed ground in eastern Russia that is almost always permanently frozen. As a result, researchers have found a fair number of well-preserved frozen mammoths there, including the one that yielded the bone marrow.

Is it such a good idea, however, to clone animals that have long been extinct? For a while there's been some discussion of a real life Jurassic Park setup containing such animals. Introducing these beasts into existing ecosystems could be like bringing in a potentially invasive species that would try to fill some space presently held by other animal(s). Even if the cloned animals were contained in special parks, there could still be a risk of spreading.

So if the woolly mammoth is successfully cloned sooner rather than later, we'd probably be left with more questions and controversy than answers, at least in the short term.
Woolly mammoth; Credit: WolfmanSF/Wikimedia Commons

Gaillo
6th December 2011, 01:54 AM
Is it such a good idea, however, to clone animals that have long been extinct...

Why not ask all the Dodo birds in congress? ;D

TheNocturnalEgyptian
6th December 2011, 03:02 AM
http://english.kyodonews.jp/photos/assets/201112/1203007-thumbx300.jpg

Mammoth cloning project in Russia
Russian scientist Semyon Grigoriev, acting director of the Sakha Republic's mammoth museum, shows a cross-section surface of a mammoth's thighbone at the museum in Russia on Nov. 17, 2011. Scientists from Japan and Russia say finding the bone filled with such well-preserved bone marrow in permafrost soil in Siberia increases the chance of cloning the extinct animal. (Kyodo)


http://english.kyodonews.jp/photos/assets/201112/1203001-thumbx300.jpg

Cloning mammoth project in Russia
Russian scientist Semyon Grigoriev, acting director of the Sakha Republic's mammoth museum, on Nov. 17, 2011 at the museum in Russia, obtains a sample of bone marrow from a mammoth's femur which was found in permafrost soil in Siberia. Scientists from Japan and Russia have confirmed that the finding of the well-preserved bone marrow increases the chance of cloning the extinct animal. (Kyodo)

Shami-Amourae
6th December 2011, 03:39 AM
I don't care, as long as I can get some Wooly Mammoth burgers.

chad
6th December 2011, 06:16 AM
they'll clone it, introduce it to somewhere cold like alaska, then declare all drilling and mining forever banned because an endangered species lives there.

Awoke
6th December 2011, 08:25 AM
Assholes playing "god" again.

EE_
6th December 2011, 08:31 AM
They better start thinking about cloning japanese people in 5 years...they're about to go extinct from Fukushima radation.

TheNocturnalEgyptian
30th May 2013, 02:30 AM
Prediction level: The Nocturnal Egyptian

http://gold-silver.us/forum/showthread.php?69910-Mammoth-with-blood-in-it-discovered-in-Siberia

Spectrism
30th May 2013, 05:27 AM
Well here is my prediction... within 5 years we will we wooly mamoths surfing the waves of California.


From my time machine travels-

http://media.247sports.com/Uploads/Boards/28/20028/46415.jpg

Neuro
30th May 2013, 06:16 AM
They better start thinking about cloning japanese people in 5 years...they're about to go extinct from Fukushima radation.
Just made me think about the radiation damage to the mammoth DNA over the the last 10.000 years. The clone may be a very interesting animal... I hope it will be anti-shlomotic with very sharp teeth...