Newly Found Living Mammoth Cells Raise Cloning Possibility
A Russian university says scientists have discovered frozen woolly
mammoth fragments that may contain living cells deep in Siberia,
bringing closer the possibility of cloning the extinct animal.
The North-East Federal Univ.
says in a statement that an international team had discovered mammoth
hair, soft tissues and bone marrow at a depth of 328 feet (100 meters)
during a summer expedition.
Expedition chief Semyon Grigoryev says a group of Korean scientists
with the team had set a goal of finding living cells in the hope of
cloning a mammoth. Scientists have previously found bodies and
fragments, but not living cells.
Grigoryev told online newspaper Vzglyad it would take months of lab
research to determine whether they have indeed found the cells.
Wooly mammoths are thought to have died out 10,000 years ago.