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Possible Resurrection of the Mammoth as early as 2018

Posted on 7/22/16 at 8:39 am
Posted by samson'sseed
Augusta
Member since Aug 2013
2070 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 8:39 am
LINK /

The technology now exists to genetically engineer a woolly mammoth.

Scientists recently learned how to cut and paste the genetic characteristics of 1 species into another species genome. They're going to cut and paste woolly mammoth characteristics into an Asian elephant embryo.

George Church of Harvard University plans to do this as early as 2018.
Posted by JustGetItRight
Member since Jan 2012
15712 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 8:45 am to
quote:

Possible Resurrection of the Mammoth as early as 2018


Is this the guy doing it?

Posted by RedPants
GA
Member since Jan 2013
5413 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 9:02 am to
Credible link. Very believe. Oh wow.
Posted by Old Sarge
Dean of Admissions, LSU
Member since Jan 2012
55224 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 9:04 am to
What could go wrong....
Posted by samson'sseed
Augusta
Member since Aug 2013
2070 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 9:05 am to
George Church, the actual scientist, bears a close resemblance to that actor. LINK =
Posted by TbirdSpur2010
ALAMO CITY
Member since Dec 2010
134026 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 9:07 am to
Life, uh,....finds a way?
Posted by LewDawg
Member since May 2009
75242 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 9:08 am to
Posted by WG_Dawg
Hoover
Member since Jun 2004
86441 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 9:57 am to
quote:

technology now exists to genetically engineer a woolly mammoth.



but why
Posted by samson'sseed
Augusta
Member since Aug 2013
2070 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 10:10 am to
To mitigate global warming.

By re-establishing the mammoth steppe, more permafrost will be preserved because herding mammals compact the soil.

I'm not kidding. Check www.reviverestore.org/projects/woolly-mammoth
Posted by WG_Dawg
Hoover
Member since Jun 2004
86441 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 10:12 am to
quote:

I'm not kidding. Check www.reviverestore.org/projects/woolly-mammoth




no thanks
Posted by LanierSpots
Sarasota, Florida
Member since Sep 2010
61596 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 10:25 am to
Did not read link but I watched a special on this a few months back. A team from China was working on it. A mammoth was found in Russia that had some flesh left and they collected some DNA


The team currently uses DNA to recreate pets for people once they die.
Posted by RedPants
GA
Member since Jan 2013
5413 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 10:43 am to
quote:

The team currently uses DNA to recreate pets for people once they die.


Not creepy at all.
Posted by Cockopotamus
Member since Jan 2013
15737 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 10:44 am to
They should get to work the dodo.

I want to try a piece
Posted by kywildcatfanone
Wildcat Country!
Member since Oct 2012
118965 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 10:46 am to
quote:

Credible link. Very believe. Oh wow.


Posted by Kentucker
Cincinnati, KY
Member since Apr 2013
19351 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 11:49 am to
The DNA for preserved mammoths is in very good shape and it should be relatively easy to revive at least a version of the species. There have been several discoveries of the frozen flesh of mammoths in Siberia and Alaska.

One specimen was so well preserved that the team of paleontologists carved out, cooked and ate steaks from it. No one liked it because it tasted like rotten meat. After several thousand years of being frozen you have to wonder what they were expecting.

Another area of interest similar to mammoth resurrection is the " reverse evolution" of the chicken. I've been following this effort since I watched a TED lecture by Jack Horner. It's at the bottom of the enclosed link.

Recreating the raptor line, from which birds evolved, of dinosaurs seems to be a matter of merely turning on archaic genes and turning off modern codes. That, of course, has proven to be difficult as you'll see in Horner's very entertaining 15-minute video.
Posted by LanierSpots
Sarasota, Florida
Member since Sep 2010
61596 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 1:28 pm to
quote:

Not creepy at all.


Agree. It did creep me out. People take their dead pets to them and they recreate them. By using the DNA of the original pet, they say the new born pet will be very much like the original.


Very creepy and dangerous in our hands





Posted by GurleyGirl
Georgia
Member since Nov 2015
13163 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 2:54 pm to
Nature will find a way.....
Posted by Kentucker
Cincinnati, KY
Member since Apr 2013
19351 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 3:14 pm to
quote:

. By using the DNA of the original pet, they say the new born pet will be very much like the original.


At first, that's true. However, a myriad of problems often pop up, such as organs growing at different rates and, most importantly, an inability to estimate how long a cloned animal will live.

The chromosomes' telomeres in a cloned animal may be duplicates of the donar pet. This means that the baby cloned animal is the same age as the animal that died. It could have a very short life span.

The main problem with cloning, at this time at least, is the sheer number of attempts that have to be made before a "successful" offspring survives. I suppose that's why it's so very expensive to have a pet cloned.

Posted by boXerrumble
Member since Sep 2011
52279 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 5:43 pm to
So when they resurrect Velociraptors, what the hell happens to us?
Posted by Kentucker
Cincinnati, KY
Member since Apr 2013
19351 posts
Posted on 7/22/16 at 6:44 pm to
Velociraptors, while very intelligent, were not the monsters we saw in Jurassic Park. The filmmakers took a lot of license with that species. They were actually much smaller than people.



It's deinonychus, "terrible claw," that we'd have to worry about. We would no doubt be high on their menu. Well, the unarmed folks would be, I suppose.



This post was edited on 7/22/16 at 6:46 pm
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