Through "Advanced Technology", Scientists Set 2027 To Reproduce The Woolly Mammoth
Through "Advanced Technology", Scientists Set 2027 To Reproduce The Woolly Mammoth 1-758
An American company working in the field of biotechnology plans to bring back the mammoth, which has been extinct for thousands of years, to life by 2027, through advanced technology.
Through the development of genes and DNA, Colossal scientists will create an embryo from a woolly mammoth, which they will place in an African elephant to take advantage of its size and allow it to give birth to the new woolly mammoth.
The woolly mammoth is an animal that lived during the modern era and lived with man, but the breed became extinct about ten thousand years ago. Its closest extant species is the Asian elephant.
The woolly mammoth's DNA is 99.6 percent identical to that of the Asian elephant, leading scientists to believe they are well on their way to achieving their goal.
Through "Advanced Technology", Scientists Set 2027 To Reproduce The Woolly Mammoth 1-759
"In the minds of many, this creature is extinct forever, but not in the minds of our scientists or in our laboratories," the company says.
“We are already in the process of de-extincting the woolly mammoth, collecting viable DNA samples and editing the genes that will allow these magnificent megafauna to come back again and live in the Arctic.”
The company aims to re-introduce the woolly mammoth into the same ecosystem where it once lived in an effort to combat climate change and preserve the Arctic.
Scientists believe that one of the causes of mammoth extinction is climate change.
Last year, the company obtained additional financing of $60 million to continue its work on this huge project, which it started in 2021, according to the “Popular Mechanics” website.

And if Closal can produce mammoth-like elephants, the company will face serious ethical questions, whether it is humane to produce an animal whose biology we know so little about, and who decides whether that animal can be allowed to live freely.


Source : websites Internet