Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Re: [Geology2] Scientists trying to clone, resurrect extinct mammoth



Oh I l ike the idea of a nice woolly mammoth better than a dinosaur trying to eat me or my dog..lol.

--- On Wed, 1/19/11, Kim Noyes <kimnoyes@gmail.com> wrote:

From: Kim Noyes <kimnoyes@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [Geology2] Scientists trying to clone, resurrect extinct mammoth
To: geology2@yahoogroups.com
Date: Wednesday, January 19, 2011, 8:42 PM

 
Next up.... Jurrasic Park!

On Wed, Jan 19, 2011 at 11:16 AM, Lin Kerns <linkerns@gmail.com> wrote:
 
Scientists trying to clone, resurrect extinct mammoth
Scientists trying to clone, resurrect extinct mammoth
A woolly mammoth skeleton is seen on display at the Venetian Resort Hotel Casino in Las Vegas in September 2009.
January 17th, 2011
11:31 AM ET
Instead of Jurassic Park, try Pleistocene Park.
A team of scientists from Japan, Russia and the United States hopes to clone a mammoth, a symbol of Earth's ice age that ended 12,000 years ago, according to a report in Japan's Yomiuri Shimbun. The researchers say they hope to produce a baby mammoth within six years.
The scientists say they will extract DNA from a mammoth carcass that has been preserved in a Russian laboratory and insert it into the egg cells of an African elephant in hopes of producing a mammoth embryo.
The team is being led by Akira Iritani, a professor emeritus at Kyoto University in Japan. He has built upon research from Teruhiko Wakayama of Kobe's Riken Center for Developmental Biology, who successfully cloned a mouse from cells that had been frozen for 16 years, to devise a technique to extract egg nuclei without damaging them, according to the Yomiuri report.
The U.S. researchers are in vitro fertilization experts. They, along with Kinki University professor Minoru Miyashita, will be responsible for implanting the mammoth embryo into an African elephant, the report said.
"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 told Yomiuri. "After the mammoth is born, we'll examine its ecology and genes to study why the species became extinct and other factors."
Source

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