Reviving species that have been wiped out (sometimes due to mankind) is not entirely fantasy– in fact, quite a few species can be brought back from extinction, through methods including cloning and selective breeding. Should scientists use their ingenuity to revitalize these species? Kim Horcher, Tim Frisch, and Ivan Van Norman (King of the Nerds, Creator of Outbreak: Undead discuss.
Read more: http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2013/04/125-species-revival/zimmer-text
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No no instead of cloning all you gave to do is find the dog breeds that mated to create the dog
Boom a dog brought back no cloning needed
2020 and nothing is back lol
Do it
'Tis 2020.
Where's mah Ursus spelaeus, Arctodus simus and Ursus arctos crowtheri
Not really true. We think we could bring a very similarly looking species that Carrie's the majority of the extinct species dna.
But it's all speculation and hypotheticals at this point
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It will be good to bring back extinct animals.
ITS BEEN 2016
The Thylacine (TasmanianTiger} was not hunted for its pelts but because – probably wrongly – they were accused of being sheep killers.
Well it's 2019 and the wooly mammoth hasn't been cloned yet give it time
Definitely bring back the Tasmanian Tiger
I want the thylacine to be back
It's 2018 and still no Mammoth.
Sounds nice,but t clones would be slightly different, like a donkey and a horse
2018 I still see nor hear of any big arse wolly mammoth
There is lack of intellect in this discussion.
I would use time travel to bring back animals, like Prehistoric Park.
Is Irish deer not Irish elk
No123
My god please get some people to narrate this who arent complete fucktards
those bones are in order for something that died along time ago
I think that we should use science to keep the animals that exist today to not become extinct!