Considering that we managed to wipe them out completely the first time using only spears, I think our current weapons are more than enough to deal with them.
Our forebears didn't have to deal with PETA, The Humane Society, etc.
Considering that we managed to wipe them out completely the first time using only spears, I think our current weapons are more than enough to deal with them.
...have I missed something? Where are we getting Mammoth sperm from?
So, a couple of years ago in scientific American, a couple of scientists wanted to clone a Mammoth by impregnating a female Asian elephant. They want to inject the Mammoth Embryo into an Elephant egg to get a pure Mammoth in one shot instead of the slow way of just fertilizing a Egg with Mammoth sperm and slowing producing a Mammoth over many generations.
Do you guys think this will ever work?
On a greater question, why do we want to bring back this thing anyways?
Didn't it become extinct for a reason, would it just die again?
Edit: Crap, I spelled Woolly wrong in the title.
A Mammoth/frog hybrid might suffer with an identity crisis, can we morally justify that?![]()
On a greater question, why do we want to bring back this thing anyways?
Didn't it become extinct for a reason, would it just die again?
Dodos have been extinct long enough for fossils. A fossil is any preserved dead organism. Bones will still be in the ground.Dodos have not been extinct long enough for fossils (and you can't get DNA from a rock), but we even have stuffed examples.
Even from a actual specimen, once a creature has died it is increasingly hard to extract its dna, every second counts. Enzymes within the cell continue to break it down after the cell has died as they are mere chemical reactions. Bond are broke, links lost.
I am sorry, but it is virtually impossible to clone the woolly Mammoth, we would never get intact DNA
Dodos have been extinct long enough for fossils. A fossil is any preserved dead organism. Bones will still be in the ground.
It is far from virtually impossible. You don't need the DNA to be intact, it just needs to all be there. Secondly, we do have many samples and have been able to read a lot of the genome. Thirdly, any gaps can be guessed at by inserting elephant DNA.
What's a Wolly Mammoth?
What's a Wolly Mammoth?
Hint: look at the pic at the beginning of this very thread.
And by the way Cloning is like the worst name ever to give to a Woolly Mammoth.