Remarkable images show a test tube blood sample from a female of the long-extinct species.
First ever sample of mammoth's blood was discovered by Siberian researches. Picture: Semyon Grigoriev
Scientists say they have found both blood and muscle tissue - perfectly preserved in the ice - from a Siberian mammoth.
The blood had dripped out of the giant animal into a natural ice capsule and it represents a dream discovery for researchers.
It comes amid a hotly contested debate on whether scientists should try to recreate the extinct species using DNA, though there now seems little doubt that this WILL happen, and the Russian team from Yakutsk that made the find is working in a partnership with South Korean scientists who are actively seeking to bring the mammoth back to life.
'We were really surprised to find mammoth blood and muscle tissue,' said Semyon Grigoriev, head of the Museum of Mammoths of the Institute of Applied Ecology of the North at the North Eastern Federal University. Picture: Semyon Grigoriev
The find was made in temperatures of minus 10C on the New Siberian Islands - or Novosibirsk Islands, off the coast of the Republic of Sakha.
'We were really surprised to find mammoth blood and muscle tissue,' said Semyon Grigoriev, head of the Museum of Mammoths of the Institute of Applied Ecology of the North at the North Eastern Federal University.
'It is the first time we managed to obtain mammoth blood. No-one has ever seen before how the mammoth's blood flows'.
He explained: 'The approximate age of this animal is about 10,000 years old. It has been preserved thanks to the special conditions, due to the fact that it did not defrost and then freeze again.
'We suppose that the mammoth fell into water or got bogged down in a swamp, could not free herself and died. Due to this fact the lower part of the body, including the lower jaw, and tongue tissue, was preserved very well.
'The upper torso and two legs, which were in the soil, were gnawed by prehistoric and modern predators and almost did not survive.'
Despite this, he hails it as 'the best preserved mammoth in the history of paleontology.
'For now our suspicion is that mammoth blood contains a kind of natural anti-freeze'. Picture: Semyon Grigoriev
The scientists believed from studying her teeth that this mammoth died when she was between 50 and 60 years of age.
'Of course, we all heard the stories, that indigenous northern people found frozen mammoth meat and fed their dogs with it. However, even if this actually happened, they did not get into hands of scientists.
'We hope that at least one living cell of the mammoth was preserved, but even in such a good condition of the carcass the chances of this are small.
'Yet it is great luck that the blood preserved and we plan to study it carefully'.
'We have taken all possible samples: samples of blood, blood vessels, glands, soft tissue, in a word - everything that we could'. Picture: Semyon Grigoriev
'For now our suspicion is that mammoth blood contains a kind of natural anti-freeze.
'In 2010, Canadian researchers compared the DNA of the mammoth and its closest relative the Indian elephant. It turned out that mammoth haemoglobin let go of its oxygen much more readily at cold temperatures.'
With the newly-discovered mammoth 'we have taken all possible samples: samples of blood, blood vessels, glands, soft tissue, in a word - everything that we could.
'Luckily we had taken with us on our expedition a special preservative agent for blood.
'We decided that taking the whole carcass by helicopter to Yakutsk would be very dangerous and that we could lose invaluable material because of defrosting. We did not take the risk, and moved the rest of carcass - it weighs about a ton - from the islands to the mainland and put it into an icehouse.
'In late July - early August, we plan to go there with our foreign colleagues for further researches.'
'We moved the rest of carcass from the islands to the mainland and put it into an icehouse'. Pictures: Semyon Grigoriev
Last year a deal was signed giving South Korean scientists exclusive rights on cloning the woolly mammoth from certain tissue samples found in the Siberian permafrost. Stem cell scientist Hwang Woo-suk's private bioengineering laboratory confirmed he is poised to make a bid to return the extinct Siberian mammoth to the planet.
Once the tissues have been treated to a nuclear transfer process, the eggs will be implanted into the womb of a live elephant for a 22-month pregnancy.
Comments (115)
'I never get into debates about this sort of stuff because they are never ending but I have to point this out. To all the heavily religious people claiming that cloning this animal would be playing God... Here are some questions and statements to think about: Why did God give humans the ability to do this then? If a person is bound to die but life support saves them, isn't that playing God? - Perhaps from now on, if someone is so terribly injured that they would die but for scientific inventions and artificial machines, they should just be let to die!? If stem cell research (which many believe is playing God) can create cures for diseases and perhaps clone organs in able to save people's lives, isnt that just the same as taking medication? If God created us humans, why give us these abilities... Maybe people who always argue along the lines of "playing God" should stop at think for a minute... God, if he does exist, might be quite pleased that the abilities and intellect he gave us could possibly prevent extinction, bring back the extinct and also save other human lives..... Just a thought, use it; don't use it....Caiden, South Africa06/06/2013 03:463'
For a persons who never gets into debates, you certainly have a lot to say. Here are the answers:
God gave us many abilities. Our task is to choose which ones to exercise. Just because we can does not mean we should. We should give life support. We shoud not clone organs with stem cells. It is not the same as taking medicine, and that's just the way it is, no mroe debate neede. We should not genetically engineer humans. However, we should bring back the Wooly mammoth because they are cool and it would be fun. God does not care about wooly mammoths anyway because they are extinct.
One the topic of the Mammoth I think it is a terrific find. To have LIQUID BLOOD preserved for over 10,000 years is fantastic. Just the properties in the blood could result in a scientific breakthrough, let alone a clone, some people have concerns about the animal living in a contained “zoo” like setting. Maybe this will be a positive thing, being able to create a sustainable life for the possible unstable animal.
I can understand the concern of putting the mammoth through constant tests, but look at the human race…we are always getting medical test/procedures to improve our health. Again I guess this is all a matter of opinion, but lets leave it that way and stop acting like children and “picking” on eachother.
No doubt Monsanto will "patent" this component so that they can add it to their GMO seeds for cold areas.
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