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Jan 19 2011 09:04pm
Yahoo - Mon Jan 17.

Didn't see a thread.

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/researchers-aim-resurrect-mammoth-five-years-20110117-002516-489.html
Quote (Yahoo)
..Japanese researchers will launch a project this year to resurrect the long-extinct mammoth by using cloning technology to bring the ancient pachyderm back to life in around five years time, a report said.

The researchers will try to revive the species by obtaining tissue this summer from the carcass of a mammoth preserved in a Russian research laboratory, the Yomiuri Shimbun reported.

"Preparations to realise this goal have been made," Akira Iritani, leader of the team and a professor emeritus of Kyoto University, told the mass-circulation daily.

Under the plan, the nuclei of mammoth cells will be inserted into an elephant's egg cells from which the nuclei have been removed to create an embryo containing mammoth genes, it said.

The embryo will then be inserted into an elephant's womb in the hope that the animal will eventually give birth to a baby mammoth. Researches hope to achieve their aim within five to six years, the Yomiuri said.

The team, which has invited a Russian mammoth researcher and two US elephant experts into the project, has already established a technique to extract DNA from frozen cells.

The researchers had once given up similar plans after nuclei in the cells of mammoth skin and muscle tissue were damaged by ice crystals and proved unusable.

However, another Japanese researcher, Teruhiko Wakayama of the Riken Centre for Developmental Biology, succeeded in cloning a mouse from the cells of another that had been kept in deep-freeze for 16 years.

Based on Wakayama's techniques, Iritani's team devised a method to extract the nuclei of mammoth eggs without damaging them.

"If a cloned embryo can be created, we need to discuss, before transplanting it into the womb, how to breed (the mammoth) and whether to display it to the public," Iritani said.

"After the mammoth is born, we will examine its ecology and genes to study why the species became extinct and other factors."

More than 80 percent of all mammoth finds have been dug up in the permafrost of the vast Sakha Republic in eastern Siberia. The most perfectly preserved remains of the Ice Age mammals still have hair and internal organs.
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Jan 19 2011 09:11pm
I actually saw this already, didn't even think to make a thread about it :P

But yeah, the idea of bringing back extinct species is amazing. It's just a shame that they probably won't end up displaying the mammoth to the public once it is finally born. I'm sure we'll at least get pictures and a video published if they're successful, though. Suck it, mother nature.
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Jan 19 2011 09:12pm
Was looking at this discovery news article. Interesting.
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Jan 19 2011 09:24pm
Quote (bentherdonethat @ Jan 19 2011 10:11pm)
I actually saw this already, didn't even think to make a thread about it :P

But yeah, the idea of bringing back extinct species is amazing. It's just a shame that they probably won't end up displaying the mammoth to the public once it is finally born. I'm sure we'll at least get pictures and a video published if they're successful, though. Suck it, mother nature.


Yeah probably. They'll definitely keep it in a lab setting. Once its more widespread I could see them eventually making enough of them to introduce them to zoos. It opens up a lot to bringing back extint specieces, right now they need all these conditions for it but I could see eventually them being able to clone them from worse sources, like bone, maybe not soon, but 20-30 years hopefully.

Its exciting, if this centuries anything like the last, by the end of it we could be so much more advanced. In 1911 could anyone beleive what we have now? Imagine what It'll be like in 2111.
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Jan 19 2011 09:32pm
we need to clone dodos and bring the stupid little things back.
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Jan 19 2011 09:51pm
That is fucking awesome if it's true.
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Jan 19 2011 11:13pm
wtf lol
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Jan 20 2011 10:17am
about to fail :D
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Jan 20 2011 10:27am
No, it will work out fine.

They successfuly cloned a mouse from 16 year old frozen cells from a dead mouse.

They will create the ferilized Mammoth embryo and insert it into an elephant's womb. It will be successful, but they say it might take another 4 years, because they're taking very careful precautions.

This isn't the first time cloning has been done. Why do you think humans only live for 100 years?

This post was edited by Torm1 on Jan 20 2011 10:29am
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