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Can we clone a woolly mammoth? Should we?

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A woolly mammoth carcass recently unearthed in Siberia could be the best hope yet for scientists aiming to clone the massive, long-extinct beast.

The mammoth specimen, which was discovered in 2013 in a remote part of Siberia, oozed a deep red liquid when it was first discovered. Scientists have now analyzed the mammoth to understand how it lived and died — and whether it will yield enough undamaged DNA to make cloning the extinct creature a reality.

n May 2013, scientists from the Siberian Northeastern Federal University crossed the icy expanse of Siberia to reach Maly Lyakhovsky Island in the far north, where rumor had it a mammoth was lurking in the permafrost. At the time, two giant tusks were poking out of the ground, but when the researchers dug further, they found an almost complete mammoth, with three legs, most of the body, part of the head and the trunk still intact.

During excavations, the carcass oozed a dark red liquid that may have been fresh mammoth blood. In fact, the mammoth meat was reportedly fresh enough that one of the scientists took a bite of it.

"This is definitely one of the best samples people have ever found," Insung Hwang, a cloning scientist at the SOOAM Biotech Research Center, said in the show.

In the past, mammoths have yielded only a few dried specks of blood, and none of them left enough intact DNA for a cloning experiment.

Yakutsk in Russia, where a group of experts had just three days to thoroughly examine the specimen before it was refrozen to prevent rotting. The team used carbon dating to determine that the female mammoth, nicknamed Buttercup, lived about 40,000 years ago. Tests conducted on the mammoth's teeth revealed it was likely in its mid-50s.

Based on growth rates from the tusks, the team deduced that the mammoth had also successfully weaned eight calves and lost one baby. Feces and bacteria in the intestines revealed the ancient matriarch ate grassland plants such as buttercups and dandelions.

Tooth marks on her bones helped the scientists glean information about Buttercup's grisly end. The mammoth had become trapped in a peat bog and was eaten alive from the back by predators such as wolves.

While scientists probed the elbow of the mammoth, the large beast oozed more blood. Chemical analyses revealed that the blood cells were broken, but still contained hemoglobin, or oxygen-ferrying molecules. Unlike humans and other mammals, mammoths evolved a cold-resistant form of hemoglobin that could survive at the near-freezing temperatures present during the Ice Age.

"The fact that blood has been found is promising for us, because it just tells us how good of a condition the mammoth was kept in for 43,000 years," Hwang said.

Cloning a mammoth?
But whether or not Buttercup can be resurrected is another matter.

DNA is fragile and must be stored at low temperatures and in uniform humidity to stay intact. Past mammoth carcasses have looked exceptionally well-preserved, with some even yielding a preserved mammoth brain. Others have oozed what looked like blood, but ultimately did not have enough DNA to recreate the mammoth genome and clone it.

So far, the team hasn't found a complete copy of the mammoth's genome. But Buttercup's tissue has revealed some very long fragments that could potentially be pieced together to recreate the genome. Still, researchers are continuing to hunt for a complete copy.

Yet, even if a complete sample of undamaged DNA can't be found, there may be other ways to clone a mammoth, said Harvard University researcher George Church. He is hoping to combine DNA from Buttercup with modern-day elephants, essentially grafting the DNA for hair, tusks and other distinctive mammoth features into the genome of the animal's modern-day relatives.
 
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Cloning a mammoth?
But whether or not Buttercup can be resurrected is another matter.
I'did say DO IT! For science FTW!!

Yet, even if a complete sample of undamaged DNA can't be found, there may be other ways to clone a mammoth, said Harvard University researcher George Church. He is hoping to combine DNA from Buttercup with modern-day elephants, essentially grafting the DNA for hair, tusks and other distinctive mammoth features into the genome of the animal's modern-day relatives.
But the problem as mentioned in the article is to get the entire genome (the entire, full length of the DNA molecule) of the mammoth intact! If you can recollect, in Jurassic Park, the scientists used frog DNA parts to stitch together and complete the dinosaur reptilian genome fragments, resulting in specimens who could change sex as and when required and reproduce in the wild! What would result is not the 'original' species, but a chimera of sorts and we would not know what kind of characteristics that new organism would feature. And therein lies the problem.

But OTOH, it would be a very interesting project. Using elephant DNA fragments to fill in spaces in the mammoth genome would throw more light on role of so called 'junk' DNA (non-coding sequences). Oh, the information and knowledge that one can gleam from such a project!!
 
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A woolly mammoth carcass recently unearthed in Siberia could be the best hope yet for scientists aiming to clone the massive, long-extinct beast.

The mammoth specimen, which was discovered in 2013 in a remote part of Siberia, oozed a deep red liquid when it was first discovered. Scientists have now analyzed the mammoth to understand how it lived and died — and whether it will yield enough undamaged DNA to make cloning the extinct creature a reality.

n May 2013, scientists from the Siberian Northeastern Federal University crossed the icy expanse of Siberia to reach Maly Lyakhovsky Island in the far north, where rumor had it a mammoth was lurking in the permafrost. At the time, two giant tusks were poking out of the ground, but when the researchers dug further, they found an almost complete mammoth, with three legs, most of the body, part of the head and the trunk still intact.

During excavations, the carcass oozed a dark red liquid that may have been fresh mammoth blood. In fact, the mammoth meat was reportedly fresh enough that one of the scientists took a bite of it.

"This is definitely one of the best samples people have ever found," Insung Hwang, a cloning scientist at the SOOAM Biotech Research Center, said in the show.

In the past, mammoths have yielded only a few dried specks of blood, and none of them left enough intact DNA for a cloning experiment.

Yakutsk in Russia, where a group of experts had just three days to thoroughly examine the specimen before it was refrozen to prevent rotting. The team used carbon dating to determine that the female mammoth, nicknamed Buttercup, lived about 40,000 years ago. Tests conducted on the mammoth's teeth revealed it was likely in its mid-50s.

Based on growth rates from the tusks, the team deduced that the mammoth had also successfully weaned eight calves and lost one baby. Feces and bacteria in the intestines revealed the ancient matriarch ate grassland plants such as buttercups and dandelions.

Tooth marks on her bones helped the scientists glean information about Buttercup's grisly end. The mammoth had become trapped in a peat bog and was eaten alive from the back by predators such as wolves.

While scientists probed the elbow of the mammoth, the large beast oozed more blood. Chemical analyses revealed that the blood cells were broken, but still contained hemoglobin, or oxygen-ferrying molecules. Unlike humans and other mammals, mammoths evolved a cold-resistant form of hemoglobin that could survive at the near-freezing temperatures present during the Ice Age.

"The fact that blood has been found is promising for us, because it just tells us how good of a condition the mammoth was kept in for 43,000 years," Hwang said.

Cloning a mammoth?
But whether or not Buttercup can be resurrected is another matter.

DNA is fragile and must be stored at low temperatures and in uniform humidity to stay intact. Past mammoth carcasses have looked exceptionally well-preserved, with some even yielding a preserved mammoth brain. Others have oozed what looked like blood, but ultimately did not have enough DNA to recreate the mammoth genome and clone it.

So far, the team hasn't found a complete copy of the mammoth's genome. But Buttercup's tissue has revealed some very long fragments that could potentially be pieced together to recreate the genome. Still, researchers are continuing to hunt for a complete copy.

Yet, even if a complete sample of undamaged DNA can't be found, there may be other ways to clone a mammoth, said Harvard University researcher George Church. He is hoping to combine DNA from Buttercup with modern-day elephants, essentially grafting the DNA for hair, tusks and other distinctive mammoth features into the genome of the animal's modern-day relatives.
And then we might have a jurassic park (movie) like situation :)
This line evoked an eww ..
In fact, the mammoth meat was reportedly fresh enough that one of the scientists took a bite of it.
 
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Can we? Depends on the condition of DNA strands we extracted from the frozen tissues.

Should we? Obviously, since hunting has been a major cause of their extinction, and there is still no concrete evidence that weather change has been the sole cause of their extinction. So by bringing them back, we will bring balance to the ecology which we disturbed thousands of years back.

The morality of 'should we' should come when we talk about cloning species humans don't have a hand in extinction, even if we do such cloning, proper care has to taken to ensure their isolation from the ecology.
 
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Can we? Depends on the condition of DNA strands we extracted from the frozen tissues.

Should we? Obviously, since hunting has been a major cause of their extinction, and there is still no concrete evidence that weather change has been the sole cause of their extinction. So by bringing them back, we will bring balance to the ecology which we disturbed thousands of years back.

The morality of 'should we' should come when we talk about cloning species humans don't have a hand in extinction, even if we do such cloning, proper care has to taken to ensure their isolation from the ecology.
I dont think they would survive for in long todays world.It lived 40000 years back and since then so much has changed on earth.Btw this is the mammoth we are talking about...(look like a calf)

1.png
 
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I dont think they would survive for in long todays world.It lived 40000 years back and since then so much has changed on earth.Btw this is the mammoth we are talking about...(look like a calf)

View attachment 155223

It is a well known fact that Mammoth went extinct 10,000 years ago, but according to recent studies and facts, there were a small numbers of mammoth (500-1000) which survived till 1650 BC in a small island near Russia.
 
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Can we? Depends on the condition of DNA strands we extracted from the frozen tissues.

Should we? Obviously, since hunting has been a major cause of their extinction, and there is still no concrete evidence that weather change has been the sole cause of their extinction. So by bringing them back, we will bring balance to the ecology which we disturbed thousands of years back.

The morality of 'should we' should come when we talk about cloning species humans don't have a hand in extinction, even if we do such cloning, proper care has to taken to ensure their isolation from the ecology.

A very good point. Is there even an ecological niche that can sustain newly genetically-resurrected Mammoths? Given their physiologic characteristics, they would need to live in colder climates that would limit them to either in Russia's Siberia or in Canada's Northwestern territories. Other than that, they're not evolutionary inclined to survive in the much warmer climates of the earth.
 
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do it.. do it..do it..
btw will them be able to cross breed with elephants?
 
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do it.. do it..do it..
btw will them be able to cross breed with elephants?

I think it is highly probable that they can. Problem is that their young probably can't reproduce (kind of like mules).
 
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I think it is highly probable that they can. Problem is that their young probably can't reproduce (kind of like mules).
why would they be like mules? If we clone a lady mammoth we will get another lady.. right... :p:
question is are they genetically close enough to elephants to breed.
 
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why would they be like mules? If we clone a lady mammoth we will get another lady.. right... :p:
question is are they genetically close enough to elephants to breed.

Its closest extant relative is the Asian Elephant. So, it could be bred with it.

This was the Columbian Mammoth, notice how it's phenotype looks similar to the Asian Elephant:

800px-Mammuthus_columbi_Sergiodlarosa[1].jpg
 
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