Researchers Map Genomes of Woolly Mammoths, Raising Possibility of Bringing Them Back

An international team of researchers has sequenced the nearly complete genome of two Siberian woolly mammoths—revealing the most complete picture to date—including new information about the species’ evolutionary history and the conditions that led to its mass extinction at the end of the Ice Age.

Written byMichelle Donovan-McMaster University News Office
| 2 min read
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“This discovery means that recreating extinct species is a much more real possibility, one we could in theory realize within decades,” says evolutionary geneticist Hendrik Poinar, director of the Ancient DNA Centre at McMaster University and a researcher at the Institute for Infectious Disease Research, the senior Canadian scientist on the project.

“With a complete genome and this kind of data, we can now begin to understand what made a mammoth a mammoth—when compared to an elephant—and some of the underlying causes of their extinction which is an exceptionally difficult and complex puzzle to solve,” he says.

One had lived in northeastern Siberia and is estimated to be nearly 45,000 years old. The other –believed to be from one of the last surviving mammoth populations—lived approximately 4,300 years ago on Russia’s Wrangel Island, located in the Arctic Ocean.
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