We here at the DUNER BLOG just love the science-fiction movie Jurassic Park. What separates this film from the million other silly dinosaur movies is author Michael Chichton's plausible premise. It goes like this: If we find dinosaur blood... that means we have 'Dino DNA'...so then we can re-create dinosaurs in the laboratory! Well folks, fiction may soon become fact. (The only problem is the animal discovered is less popular than T-Rex.) Nonetheless, it could happen. Last week, insane scientists recovered a 10,000 year old Woolly Mammoth carcass on Lyakhovsky Island off Siberia's Arctic Ocean coast...complete with DNA.
Yakutsk in Winter. |
Re-creation courtesy of the New York Post. |
But can Woolly Mammoth blood really last 10,000 years? Let's ask Professor Grigoriev. "The blood is very dark. It was found in ice cavities bellow the belly. When we broke these cavities with a poll pick, the blood came running out." Next, the samples will be shipped to research facilities around the globe. Soon, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC and Toronto University will be busy analyzing data. However, we here at the DUNER BLOG are more interested in South Korea' Sooam Biotech Foundation. Their "Mammoth Rebirth Project" is getting precariously close to recreating a living mammoth.
While every Siberian dreams of herds of Woolly Mammoth, plodding along the frozen tundra again, it's important to remember: Unfortunately, we are still a long way off from building an actual Jurassic Park amusement park. See, the only time humans have successfully re-created an extinct species was in Japan in 2009. For seven glorious minutes, a Pyrenean Ibex came to life in a laboratory. It had a pulse and produced body warmth. Then...BAM! It died of lung failure. While we have faith in the South Koreans, we don't want to get any one's hopes up! But rest assured...if an mammoth, ibex or brontosaurus is ever brought back to life...we here at the DUNER BLOG will bring you the story...FIRST!!
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