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Scientists plan to clone Woolly Mammoth

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Scientists from Russia and Japan are undertaking a Jurassic Park-style experiment in an effort to bring the woolly mammoth out of extinction.

The scientists claim that a thigh bone found in August contains remarkably well-preserved marrow cells, which could form the starting point of the experiment.

The team claim that the cloning could be complete within the next five years.

But others have cast doubt on whether such a thing is possible.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-16068581

Wow, I hope they can do this. This would be really cool.
 
Scientists from Russia and Japan are undertaking a Jurassic Park-style experiment in an effort to bring the woolly mammoth out of extinction.

The scientists claim that a thigh bone found in August contains remarkably well-preserved marrow cells, which could form the starting point of the experiment.

The team claim that the cloning could be complete within the next five years.

But others have cast doubt on whether such a thing is possible.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-16068581

Wow, I hope they can do this. This would be really cool.


Sounds good. I am also hoping they can do it. :)
 
I doubt it would work, if it's really to the advanced level the article states, but even if it is, and even if they can, I think it would be a bad idea.
 
ianmalcolme131616752572.jpg
 
I hope it works. It's kind of freaky to consider that all those awesome animals - mammoths, wooly rhinos, giant deers, sabre tooth cats, cave lions, etc - died out almost within living human memory. If those species had been able to survive only a few thousand years longer, we could still see them in zoos today.

It's not like dinosaurs, those great animals went extinct just on the brink of modern human culture. When the last mammoth died, the great egyptian pyramids had been standing for centuries already - think about that.
 
Well, how many tigers or hippos have you observed in the wild? I prefer animals living in their natural habitat too, but that's not where I would generally have a chance to look at them.
 
This is unlike what Ian Malcolm was worried about in Jurassic Park. Even he seemed to begrudgingly accept that bringing back creatures who died out due to human predation might be acceptable, but argued that dinos didn't fall into the same category. Mammoths, on the other hand, do fit into that category, being among the first animal species to have been driven to extinction by man. As such. I find it ironically appropriate that will likely be one of the first species to be resurrected from extinction by man.
 
I think it is a bad idea.

There isn't a natural environment to put mammoths back into anymore. The best they could expect could expect is a life in captivity.

Now if a thylacine could be clone that would probably be a different matter as the species could be reintoduced into the wild in Tasmania without the ecology being upset.

The biggest problem with cloning a thylacine is the lack of a surrogate species and the fact that there would be very little genetic diversity within cloned species.
 
This is unlike what Ian Malcolm was worried about in Jurassic Park. Even he seemed to begrudgingly accept that bringing back creatures who died out due to human predation might be acceptable, but argued that dinos didn't fall into the same category. Mammoths, on the other hand, do fit into that category, being among the first animal species to have been driven to extinction by man. As such. I find it ironically appropriate that will likely be one of the first species to be resurrected from extinction by man.

Modern paleontology has more or less come to the conclusion that man didn't have much impact on mammoths. It was climate change that killed them.
 
It's not like dinosaurs, those great animals went extinct just on the brink of modern human culture. When the last mammoth died, the great egyptian pyramids had been standing for centuries already - think about that.

:cardie: No!

They have been long gone, by the time the last glaciers around here melted away. This was way before Ancient Egypt.
 
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