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Pleistocene Park Just Got Closer

Researchers at Pennsylvania State University have sequenced most of the genome of wooly mammoths.

http://media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/09/74609-004-4834C543.jpg

As Scientific American reports:

Thousands of years after the last woolly mammoth lumbered across the tundra, scientists have sequenced a whopping 50 percent of the beast’s nuclear genome,  they report in a new study. Earlier attempts to sequence the DNA of these icons of the Ice Age produced only tiny quantities of code. The new work marks the first time that so much of the genetic material of an extinct creature has been retrieved. Not only has the feat provided insight into the evolutionary history of mammoths, but it is a step toward realizing the science-fiction dream of being able to resurrect a long-gone animal...

Thus far the mammoth genome exists only in bits and pieces: it has not yet been assembled. The researchers are awaiting completion of the genome of the African savanna elephant, a cousin of the woolly mammoth, which will serve as a road map for how to reconstruct the extinct animal’s genome.

Armed with complete genomes for the mammoth and its closest living relative, the Asian elephant, scientists may one day be able to bring the mammoth back from the beyond. “A year ago I would have said this was science fiction,” Schuster remarks. But as a result of this sequencing achievement, he now believes one could theoretically modify the DNA in the egg of an elephant to match that of its furry cousin by artificially introducing the appropriate substitutions to the genetic code. Based on initial comparisons of mammoth and elephant DNA, he estimates that around 400,000 changes would produce an animal that looks a lot like a mammoth; an exact replica would require several million.

Here's hoping that researchers can find enough DNA to sequence the genomes of saber-tooth cats, ground sloths, and glyptodonts.

The Scientific American article can be found here.

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Comments to "Pleistocene Park Just Got Closer":

Warren | November 19, 2008, 6:23pm | #

Neanderthals!

J sub D | November 19, 2008, 6:24pm | #

Color me skeptical.

db | November 19, 2008, 6:34pm | #

So, if we resurrect mammoths, is it wrong to hunt them for their tusks? We could just make more, after all.

KD | November 19, 2008, 6:34pm | #

Can we hunt them? With elephant er... mammoth guns? Or will we have to use sharp sticks and spears?

Ken Shultz | November 19, 2008, 6:35pm | #

Nice try guys, but the woolly mammoth is a hoax.

Besides the world only being 6,000 years old,
there's no way something that big could have fit on the ark.

Those scientists are gonna have to get up pretty early in the morning to pull if they want to pull the wool over my eyes.

KD | November 19, 2008, 6:35pm | #

Dang.. db beat me to it - but I was thinking about the meat more than the tusks... I'd even buy a freezer!

KD | November 19, 2008, 6:39pm | #

Clovis points!

We do need a new economy. Nomadic hunting of mega fauna was the economy until that damn Holocene global warming.

db | November 19, 2008, 6:40pm | #

No freezer. Only authentic period methods of meat preservation are allowed.

SIV | November 19, 2008, 6:40pm | #

Sorry KD,

I entered your name in the wrong box


Clovis points!

We do need a new economy. Nomadic hunting of mega fauna was the economy until that damn Holocene global warming.

Voros McCracken | November 19, 2008, 6:50pm | #

I for one welcome our Wooly Mammoth overlords.

Capn Mike | November 19, 2008, 6:56pm | #

And they SNEEEERED at Michael Crichton. Lord, I mourn that dude...

J sub D | November 19, 2008, 7:03pm | #

A decent read. Not Varley's best, but it's good for a couple of lazy afternoons.

kusterdu | November 19, 2008, 7:17pm | #

This may sound weird, but when I was a kid I read about the possibility of resurrecting a wooly mammoth, and I have been waiting for them to do it ever since. Let's hope they succeed!

Syd Henderson | November 19, 2008, 7:20pm | #

Here's hoping that researchers can find enough DNA to sequence the genomes of saber-tooth cats, ground sloths, and glyptodonts.

What would you use as a host animal for the last two? For mammoths you could probably just use elephants (who will be appalled at their hairy offspring), but is there anything that could host a glyptodont?

Ron Bailey | November 19, 2008, 7:32pm | #

SH: Regular sloths are still around so maybe ground sloths by caesarean birth? As for glyptodonts, hmmm. maybe armadillos, but perhaps we'll have to wait for incubators. ;-)

Cool Cal | November 19, 2008, 7:35pm | #

I petition the Canadian Giant Beaver!

And no, I am not referring to that great unshorn mass betwixt Naomi Klein's legs.

Crow Eating Dumbass | November 19, 2008, 7:37pm | #

Can we clone Raquel Welch from that cave man movie?

Yum, yum gimme some!

KD | November 19, 2008, 7:57pm | #

SIV | November 19, 2008, 6:40pm | #
Sorry KD,

I entered your name in the wrong box


Clovis points!

We do need a new economy. Nomadic hunting of mega fauna was the economy until that damn Holocene global warming.
No worries SIV re the handle error: but you do bring up an interesting thought on the potential availability of Clovis points (and personally I'd recommend that anyone able invest in flint related industries asap) - if as some speculate, there is going to be a clamp down on guns, and high taxes or regulatory restrictions on ammo (possibly including the banning of lead) via the new administration, let us open up the discussion (i.e. thread-jack) about the possibility that Clovis points may be restricted. Also consider that even though these are humanly reconstituted mammoths, the originals were driven into extinction by ancient (and presumed natural) global warming, and that they could very well become extinct again, this time due to human-caused global warming.

BTW I second the Raquel Welch cloning idea.

Pro Libertate | November 19, 2008, 8:33pm | #

I predict a robust mammoth industry, because, as it turns out, man has an atavistic taste for mammoth. I intend to buy 50 head of mammoth to start a ranch.

Michael Crichton's Ghost | November 19, 2008, 8:47pm | #

Um, guys, I think this might not be the best idea...

Pro Libertate | November 19, 2008, 9:12pm | #

Oh, please. I can contain my mammoths with my superior 21st century wit and technology.

Douglas Fletcher | November 19, 2008, 9:17pm | #

I wonder if wooly mammoth tastes more like beef, or pork.

Pro Libertate | November 19, 2008, 9:35pm | #

It tastes like victory.

highnumber | November 19, 2008, 9:55pm | #

The possibility of the ground sloth excites me much more than the mammoth. I want to ride one.

Pro Libertate | November 19, 2008, 10:01pm | #

Giant sloths are nice, but what you really need returned from extinction is a moa.

This Week in Bible Prophecy | November 19, 2008, 10:57pm | #

While we know ground sloths were still around in Jesus' time, we don't know if he rode them. But he probably did!

robc | November 19, 2008, 11:17pm | #

Now if only scientists could bring back the pygmy tarsier ... oh wait, never mind.

http://fe11.story.media.ac4.yahoo.com/news/us/story/nm/20081118/sc_nm/us_primate_indonesia

Hazel Meade | November 19, 2008, 11:23pm | #

I can't wait for all the adorable saber-toothed kitten videos on youtube.

CharlesWT | November 19, 2008, 11:24pm | #

Why are they wasting time genome sequencing dead wooley mammoths when it appears that Obama is going to have a bunch of them in his cabinet? Or is that dinosaurs?...

mtc | November 20, 2008, 12:36am | #

I'll get worried when they start talking Neandethrals....who actually turn out to be smarter than us but didn't survive cuz they weren't such a bunch of murdering bastards but once ressurected master our modern technology and enslave us anyway.

You heard it here first.

John C. Randolph | November 20, 2008, 1:45am | #

Mammoths? Who cares. Let me know when they make a new Lilly Langtry or Sophie Tucker.

-jcr

Jonas | November 20, 2008, 2:14am | #

Bring back the Andrewsarchus! PLEEEEEEAAAAAASE!?!

Loverboy | November 20, 2008, 6:55am | #

Mammoth and elephant DNA don't splice!

ed | November 20, 2008, 7:54am | #

Do they have the complete genome of FDR?
Just wondering.

VM | November 20, 2008, 8:23am | #

highnumber | November 19, 2008, 9:55pm | #
The possibility of the ground sloth excites me much more than the mammoth. I want to ride one.
gets out hose...

So easy a libertarian can do it! | November 20, 2008, 11:28am | #

I'll get worried when they start talking Neandethrals....who actually turn out to be smarter than us but didn't survive cuz they weren't such a bunch of murdering bastards but once ressurected master our modern technology and enslave us anyway.

No worry, they can be repelled by ubiquitous Geico signs.

Someone Who Doesn't Want to Lose His Job | November 20, 2008, 3:01pm | #

I'll get worried when they start talking Neandethrals....who actually turn out to be smarter than us but didn't survive cuz they weren't such a bunch of murdering bastards but once ressurected master our modern technology and enslave us anyway.

You heard it here first.


I actually think this is probably very accurate. Have you seen the huge noggins those neanderthals had?

Andy | November 20, 2008, 4:00pm | #

My favorite extinct organism to bring back would be the giant 8 ft tall kangaroos I heard about once. Or the centipede looking things that were like 10 ft long. The mini sized of those things give me the creeps, i'd probably pass out at the sight of one bigger than I am.

Also, new goal for genetic engineers: create a real-life version of Sesame Street. The wooly mammoth is obviously Snuffalupogus (spelling?) Big Bird shouldn't be too hard.