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    The Week

    How scientists resurrected a 30,000-year-old flower

    After successfully growing samples of ancient S. stenophylla in a lab, scientists may finally have a technique to recreate the woolly mammoth

    A few years ago in northeastern Siberia, Russian scientists uncovered a rare trove of immaculately frozen Arctic squirrel burrows dating back to the Ice Age. Inside they found buried seeds, including the fruit of a flower called the narrow-leafed campion. Now, after 30,000 years, they've brought the original flower back to life. Here's what you should know:

    So they grew the flower from frozen seeds?
    Not exactly. Efforts to resurrect ancient plants from seeds found "wonderfully preserved by the cold, dry environment" fell short, says Sharon Levy at Scientific American, including attempts to sprout sedge, alpine bearberry, and the narrow-leafed campion (known scientifically as Silene stenophylla). "Those seeds did begin to germinate, but then faltered and died back." Instead, the scientists, led by David Gilichinsky of the Russian Academy of Sciences, looked to tissue samples from S. stenophylla fruit — specifically, they turned to the plant's placenta (think of the white meat inside a bell pepper), which produces its seeds.

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    Then what did they do?
    After thawing out the organic material, they placed cells taken from the placenta into petri dishes. Scientists were delighted when these specimens grew into "whole plants," and were able to use those seeds to farm a second generation of flowers. The team was able to grow 36 narrow-leafed campion plants in all, and the specimens "appeared identically to the present day narrow-leafed campion until they flowered," says Nicholas Wade at The New York Times, "when they produced narrower and more splayed-out petals." 

    How were the frozen seeds able to survive for so long?
    Researchers think it may have something to do with the "special circumstances" of the campion's deep freeze. Squirrels bury their finds next to icy permafrost "to keep seeds cool during the arctic summers," meaning the fruits were frozen early on, notes Wade. Plus, the placentas contain "high levels of sucrose and phenols, which are good antifreeze agents." 

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    Are these the oldest plants ever grown?
    By far. The sediments surrounding the frozen seeds date back roughly 30,000 to 32,000 years. "If so, it would trounce the previous record held be a date palm from a 2,000-year-old seed recovered from Masada, Israel," says Tristin Hopper at National Post

    What's next?
    Scientists will use the techniques to produce more plants found in the Siberian burrows, but the same techniques could potentially be applied to woolly mammoths or saber toothed tigers. "We find partially-preserved mammoth carcasses in the Siberian tundra that are 30,000 years old," says paleontologist Grant Zazula. "This raises the potential that you could have viable sperm cells and eggs cells within some of these animals."

    Sources: Associated Press, National Post, NY Times, Scientific American

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    13 comments

    • john  •  Stockton, California  •  3 mths ago
      Sounds like jurrasic park,?
    • Dr. Foo  •  3 mths ago
      I think it would be cool to use ancient frozen tissue to clone woolly mammoths and saber-tooth cats.
    • Denise  •  3 mths ago
      leave already extinct things dead -- let's save our endangered species of today
    • Robert Robinson  •  Encino, California  •  3 mths ago
      The actions by the Russian biologists were truely amazing and guess what, they didn't cost American taxpayers a single cent. Scientific research does not always have a quick financial payoff, sometimes the only payoff is the gaining of new knowledge. One of the best things arout scientific research is simply the peeling away one more bit of the unknown. When Thomas Edison and his research laboratory in Menlo Park had failed to produce a commercially viable lightbulbulb after more than 1,000 tries, he noted that at least he knew a 1,000 things which didn't work, then continued the experiments until they were successful. People should realize that for every advance, every discovery that scientists make, they have also had uncounted numbers of "failures". Will scientists ever bring any now-extinct animals back to life? I don't know, but I do know that the effort will bring new knowledge to humankind, and that is always good.
    • Stephen Satan  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      What the HELL do you do with a Wooly Mammoth???? Hunt it into EXTINCTION !!!!!!! VICIOUS CYCLE..........
    • Plan A  •  3 mths ago
      I'm still waiting for them to grow a Dinosaur.
    • gildo9  •  3 mths ago
      Where are the Pictures. hmmm fishy or should I say Flowery
    • Poinsettia  •  3 mths ago
      There are never pictures when you want there to be.
    • observer  •  San Antonio, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      How many millions were spent on this that could have gone to better purposes?
      • real truth 3 mths ago
        These are the things we should be spending it on,and not better,more efficient ways to kill.
    • jb  •  Mesquite, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      now for the dinosaurs, i always wanted a pet dino

      also where the pic
    • Noire Insight  •  New York, New York  •  3 mths ago
      This will only take a turn for the worst. Unless of course scientists can bring thylacines back from extinction...
      • Robert Robinson 3 mths ago
        Sorry, but the dog-like Thylacine is truely gone, no genetic material is available or likely to ever be found since where they died out has no perma frost to help preserve the genetic material of dead animals.
    • Connor  •  Salt Lake City, Utah  •  3 mths ago
      HOW THE FREAK DID I END UP HERE...
      • Trish 3 mths ago
        You read the headline and clicked on the link, just like everybody else.
    • Isaac  •  Fair Oaks, California  •  3 mths ago
      Ok this is sick(good) I want a to pet a wooly mammoth and have a pet sabretooth tiger! Cant get my hopes up though haha
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