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29 Jun 07 - 01:07 PM (#2090178) Subject: BS: More DNA: When will we clone them? From: beardedbruce The article below shows that even more DNA from extinct specoes is available: The dodo, mammoths and the passenger pigeon could easily be recreated by today's technology. THAT is what we should be using ity for. Scientists fly into raptures over flightless Fred By Ed Harris 1 hour, 39 minutes ago BOIS CHERI, Mauritius (Reuters) - The remains of a dodo found in a cave beneath bamboo and tea plantations in Mauritius offer the best chance yet to learn about the extinct flightless bird, a scientist said on Friday. The discovery was made earlier this month in the Mauritian highlands but the location was kept secret until the recovery of the skeleton, nicknamed "Fred," was completed on Friday. Four men guarded the site overnight. Julian Hume, a paleontologist at Britain's Natural History Museum, told Reuters the remains were likely to yield excellent DNA and other vital clues, because they were found intact, in isolation, and in a cave. "The geneticists who want to get their hands on this will be skipping down the street," he said, after bringing the last of the remains to the surface. Given the nickname "Fred" after the 65-year-old who found them, the remains should provide the first decent specimens of dodo DNA, he said. "Then you can work out how it actually got to Mauritius, because it must have originally flown here before evolving into flightlessness and the big, fat bird that we know," he said. "We know it's a giant pigeon," he added. It the first discovery of dodo remains away from the coastal regions, suggesting that the bird, extinct since the 17th century, lived all over the Indian Ocean island, he said. Hume said the dodo was almost certainly finished off by animals introduced by Europeans about 400 years ago. Theories that it was hunted to extinction by the Dutch were "total nonsense," he said, adding that the remains were highly fragile. "If you try and pick it up, it just falls apart," he said. "You won't see a mounted, beautiful thing from this." |
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29 Jun 07 - 01:09 PM (#2090181) Subject: RE: BS: More DNA: When will we clone them? From: Donuel mmmm dodo is delicious save the dodo save the passenger pidgeon save the whale |
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29 Jun 07 - 02:04 PM (#2090225) Subject: RE: BS: More DNA: When will we clone them? From: Rapparee Save the nukes! Shave the whales! |
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29 Jun 07 - 04:02 PM (#2090304) Subject: RE: BS: More DNA: When will we clone them? From: Bill D Dodo isn't NEARLY as tasty as Ivory Billed Woodpecker....(better than Moa, though) |
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29 Jun 07 - 04:06 PM (#2090308) Subject: RE: BS: More DNA: When will we clone them? From: beardedbruce Can I have some Moa? |
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29 Jun 07 - 07:08 PM (#2090471) Subject: RE: BS: More DNA: When will we clone them? From: Donuel There was big news on the DNA front published today. It has something to do with finding a human type cell in a mouse with stem cell capabilities. For some reason I never caught the drift of why there was so much importence being placed upon this discovery. |
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29 Jun 07 - 10:00 PM (#2090573) Subject: RE: BS: More DNA: When will we clone them? From: Rapparee Because they can get around the Shrub's ban on stem cell research. |