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mammoths: search

Frozen Mice Cloned - Are Woolly Mammoths Next?

Japanese scientists have cloned mice whose bodies were frozen for as long 16 years and said on Monday it may be possible to use the technique to resurrect mammoths and other extinct species.

Mammoths DNA revealed by icy remains

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Mice Cloned After 16 Year Freeze; Mammoths Next?

Clonedmice2 Cells taken from mice frozen 16 years ago have grown into healthy clones, raising the possibility of reproducing long-dead animals and even resurrecting extinct species.

Japanese clone mouse from frozen cell, aim for mammoths

AFP – This handout picture, released by Japan natural science research center shows a cloned mouse (left) created …

Japanese clone mouse from frozen cell, aim for mammoths (AFP)

AFP – This handout picture, released by Japan natural science research center shows a cloned mouse (left) created …

Japanese clone mouse from frozen cell, aim for mammoths

This handout picture released by Japan natural science research center shows a cloned mouse (left) created with a new technology by using a frozen dead cell of a mouse

Mammoth Genome Decoded -- Clones on the Way?

Using hairs from woolly mammoths, scientists have sequenced an extensive genome of these elephant cousins, a new report says.

Genome Hacking Could Reverse-Engineer Extinct Woolly Mammoth

Mammothhair It might not make sense to pull woolly mammoths from the Ice Age into an age of global warming, but resurrecting that lost species just became a bit less far-fetched.

Mammoth genome approaching completion

Using well-preserved specimens of hair from a variety of extinct woolly mammoths, researchers have assembled about 70 percent of the creature's nuclear genome.

How likely is mammoth cloning?

London (GUARDIAN NEWS SERVICE): There's a child-like glee in knowing that off the back of recent experiments, scientists may try to "resurrect" long dead Woolly Mammoths that keeled over in the Siberian permafrost 11,000 years ago.

Frozen mice cloned in Japan institute

WASHINGTON -- Japanese scientists have cloned mice whose bodies were frozen for as long 16 years and said on Monday it may be possible to use the technique to resurrect mammoths and other extinct species.

Frozen Mice Cloned

m0rphin3 writes "Japanese scientists have cloned mice whose bodies were frozen for as long as 16 years and said on Monday it may be possible to use the technique to resurrect mammoths and other extinct species. Could we finally see Jurassic Park become a reality, or perhaps use this for colonizing other galaxies?"

Frozen hair gives up first mammoth genome

Tufts of frozen woolly mammoth hair have yielded a rough draft of its genome. It's the most successful attempt to sequence the DNA of an extinct ancient animal to date, and although we won't see resurrected mammoths grazing the tundra anytime soon, it could give us a peek into the reasons for their extinction.


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