Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Surrogate Mother to Neanderthal





This is unexpected and also establishes that just about any creature that has gone extinct during the last twenty thousand years is prospective at least. I consider the creatures wiped out over the past five centuries and preserved in museum collections as inevitable recovery prospects. Most will require habitat reconstruction first but even that is just beginning to get underway. Most are islands anyway so it is possible at least.

I suspect that the passenger pigeon will have difficulties with rodents though.

At least the prospect is been raised and it would allow a lot of questions to be answered.

Neanderthal to be born to surrogate mother?

Posted on Saturday, 19 January, 2013 


There have been indications that a cloning experiment to create a live Neanderthal may be on the cards.

While the idea of using DNA from frozen mammoth remains to clone a live specimen is nothing new, the concept that we could do something similar to bring back extinct species of human such as Neanderthals may prove quite a shock to most people. Despite the technical and ethical difficulties inherent in such an endeavor, there are signs that some scientists may be considering research leading up to such an achievement and that they may need a surrogate human mother to deliver the child.

Recently Harvard Medical School geneticist George Church was quoted as saying that eventually, an "adventurous female human" would be required to act as a surrogate mother in the birth of the first Neanderthal in 30,000 years. It's a topic that Church has talked about before, in 2009 he hinted at the possibility of cloning a "near-Neanderthal" when the Neanderthal genome was first reported.

While the idea of reviving Neanderthals may sound farfetched, take for example the work of biologists to clone endangered or extinct non-human animals.

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