Liquid Blood From a Frozen Siberian Foal Is Relative to 42,000 Years Ago

On an expedition to the Batagaika crater in Siberia a team of Mammoth tusk hunters uncovered the nearly preserved remains of a 42,000-year-old foal.

Liquid Blood Extracted From 42,000-Year-Old Foal Found Frozen in Siberia

Instead, the young foal showed no signs of external damage, retaining its fur, tail and hooves and the hair on its leg and head, has preserved by the permafrost of the region or permanently frozen ground.

The Siberian Times reports that Russia’s North-Eastern Federal University and the Biotech sooam researcher in South Korea extracted blood and urine from the specimen, paving the way for further analysis aimed at cloning the long-dead horse and resurrecting the extinct Lenskaya lineage to which it belongs.

Scientists will take viable cells from the blood samples and grow them in the laboratory in order to clone the animal. Perhaps they will consider looking at SciQuip’s range of incubators to stimulate the growth of the cells.

This task is harder said than done. More than 20 attempts to grow cells from foal’s tissue have been made by the team over the past month, but they were all unsuccessful, according to a recent report from the Siberian Times. Russian researcher Lena Grigoryeva said that the participants remain “positive about the outcome.”

The fact that the horse still has hair makes it one of the most well-preserved Ice Age animals ever found, Grigoryev tells CNN’s Gianluca Mezzofiore, adding, “Now we can say what color was the wool of the extinct horses of the Pleistocene era.”

In life, the foal boasted a bay-colored body and a black tail and mane. Aged just one to two weeks old at the time of his death, the young Lenskaya, or Lena horse, met the same untimely demise as many similarly intact animals trapped in permafrost for millennia.

Liquid Blood Extracted From 42,000-Year-Old Foal Found Frozen in Siberia

The scientists extracted liquid blood samples from the 42,000-year-old animal’s heart vessels (Semyon Grigoryev/North-Eastern Federal University)

The foal likely drowned in a “natural trap” of sorts-namely, mud that later froze into permafrost, Semyon Grigoryev of Yakutia’s Mammoth Museum told Russian news agency TASS, as reported by the Siberian Times.

“A lot of mud and silt which the foal gulped during the last seconds of the foal’s life were found inside its gastrointestinal tract,” Grigoryev says.

Liquid Blood Extracted From 42,000-Year-Old Foal Found Frozen in Siberia

Researchers collect liquid blood from the ice age foal found frozen in Siberian permafrost.

This is only the second time researchers have extracted liquid blood from the remains of prehistoric creatures. In 2013, a group of Russian scientists accomplished the same feat using the body of a 15,000-year-old female woolly mammoth discovered by Grigoryev and his colleagues in 2013, as George Dvorsky reports for Gizmodo.

(It’s worth noting that the team studying the foal has also expressed hopes of cloning a woolly mammoth.) Significantly, the foal’s blood is a staggering 27,000 years older than this previous sample.

The NEFU and South Korean scientists behind the new research are so confident of their success that they have already begun searching for a surrogate mare to carry the cloned Lena horse and, in the words of the Siberian Times, fulfill “the historic role of giving birth to the comeback species.”

It’s worth noting, however, that any acclaim is premature and, as Dvorsky writes, indicative of the “typical unbridled enthusiasm” seen in the Russian news outlet’s reports.

Speaking with CNN’s Mezzofiore, Grigoryev himself expressed doubts about the researcher’s chances, explaining, “I think that even the unique preservation of blood is absolutely hopeless for cloning purposes since the main blood cells … do not have nuclei with DNA.”

He continued, “We are trying to find intact cells in muscle tissue and internal organs that are also very well-preserved.”

What the Siberian Times fails to address are the manifold “ethical and technological” questions raised by reviving long-gone species. Among other concerns, according to Dvorsky, scientists have cited the clone’s diminished quality of life, issues of genetic diversity and inbreeding, and the absence of an adequate Ice Age habitat.

It remains to be seen whether the Russian-South Korean team can actually deliver on its ambitious goal. Still, if the purported July 2018 resurrection of two similarly aged 40,000-year-old roundworms “defrosted” after millennia in the Arctic permafrost is any indication, the revival of ancient animals is becoming an increasingly realistic possibility.

Related Posts

Exquisite Gold Necklace of King Amenhotep III from Tutankhamun’s Dynasty (1336-1326 BC)

The Pendant of Amenhotep III is a small, solid gold figurine that was discovered in the tomb of King Tutankhamun in the Valley of the Kings. The ancient depicts a…

Read more

Journeying Back in Time to the 1848 California Gold Rush: Uncovering a Fortune in Gold Bars – The Treasures of the S.S. Ingots

The majority of the text on this page came from historical descriptions that were included in various listings at Heritage Auctions. The discovery of gold in northern California in January 1848 was a transformative event for California itself, the nation, …

Read more

Ancient Giants: Tracking the Enigmatic Giant Tatu for Survival by the First Americans

If you love to know about prehistoric animals, then you’ve probably heard about giant armadillos. These creatures roamed the eагtһ millions of years ago, and they were a ⱱіtаɩ part of the ecosystem. Today, they’re extіпсt, but they’ve left behind a rich …

Read more

Ancient Enigmas Unveiled: Human Skeletons Defy Expectations, Suggesting Humanity’s Age May Exceed Current Beliefs

There are many reported human skeletal finds which are in discordance with current evolutionary beliefs dating back to anomalously ancient geological periods in the distant past, way before it is accepted that human beings ever existed. One intriguing …

Read more

Recognizing Outstanding Team Efforts: Parker Surprises Employee with a $12,000 Gold Ashtray for Birthday Celebration in Season 2023

In the intense race to achieve gold mining goals at Parker’s Indian River claim, the team has faced unforeseen challenges. “Foreign, we’ve been running these wash plants hard all year, but we’re going to run the hardest right now, right to the finish …

Read more

Fossilized Time Capsule: Hyenas Utilized Lava Caves in Saudi Arabia for Meat Storage Over Millennia

Beneath the rocky terrain of Saudi Arabia, a fossil cave reveals a captivating chapter in the intricate tapestry of natural history. Unveiling a ᴜпіqᴜe interaction between hyenas and the geological landscape, the cave tells a story of ancient behaviors …

Read more

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *