the legacy of the woolly mammoth
RELATIONSHIP TO THE MODERN ELEPHANT
- Woolly mammoths are closely related
to today’s Asian elephants - The giants of the Ice Age weren’t as large
as you think: They were about the size of
today’s African elephants, growing to a
height of between 2.7 and 4.6 metres
(in the case of the steppe mammoth) - A mammoth’s ears were shorter than the
modern elephant’s ears – an adaptation
to prevent frostbite
THE TUSK HUNT
- Mammoth ivory trading – unlike
elephant ivory – is legal - The hunt for mammoth tusks in Arctic
Siberia has been enabled by global
warming, as the permafrost melts,
revealing the remains - A mammoth tusk can range from three
to four metres in length - A top-grade mammoth tusk can fetch
around USD400 per 500 grams
BRINGING BACK THE MAMMOTH?
The concept of mammoth cloning
is contested – and controversial –
in scientific circles, primarily because
there is concern that the woolly
mammoth’s habitat is no longer,
so it would not survive in today’s
climate. Microbes – which animals
rely on to digest food – have changed
in the 10,000 years since the woolly
mammoths were around
MAMMOTH
Cloning a Woolly Mammoth
ELEPHANT
NUCLEI
Egg cells are then taken from a
modern elephant, and the DNA
material is similarly removed.
Using a gene-editing technique,
the mammoth cells are then placed
within the elephant egg cells
2
The fertilised egg is then placed
in the modern elephant’s womb,
with the idea that she will give
birth to a live mammoth. This is far
from cloning mammoths, but it is a
first step to manipulating the DNA
found in mammoth corpses
3
Preserved cells are extracted
from frozen mammoth corpses.
The nuclei is then extracted
from the mammoth cell
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