Marty McFly's middle name is Metacard
Posted: Sun Jun 23, 2019 2:10 pm
At the risk of sounding absolutely ridiculously antique and retro . . .
. . . someone once told me about explorers in Siberia in the 19th century surviving
by sucking the marrow from mammoth bones that had been frozen in the permafrost
for 10,000 years.
Beyond that, Yuka's cells may have some use:
https://phys.org/news/2019-03-mammoth-f ... -life.html
"The project by an international team took cell nuclei from a well-preserved mammoth
discovered in 2011 in Siberian permafrost and placed them into several dozen mouse egg cells.
"Of those, five displayed the biological reactions that happen just before cell division begins, said Kei Miyamoto, a member of the team at Kindai University in western Japan."
Now, while reviving a mammoth to ride round downtown Chicago might be slightly
foolish, a spot of mammoth fat might well serve to grease the axles of your Lamborghini.
http://www.canelasoftware.com/metacard.html
. . . someone once told me about explorers in Siberia in the 19th century surviving
by sucking the marrow from mammoth bones that had been frozen in the permafrost
for 10,000 years.
Beyond that, Yuka's cells may have some use:
https://phys.org/news/2019-03-mammoth-f ... -life.html
"The project by an international team took cell nuclei from a well-preserved mammoth
discovered in 2011 in Siberian permafrost and placed them into several dozen mouse egg cells.
"Of those, five displayed the biological reactions that happen just before cell division begins, said Kei Miyamoto, a member of the team at Kindai University in western Japan."
Now, while reviving a mammoth to ride round downtown Chicago might be slightly
foolish, a spot of mammoth fat might well serve to grease the axles of your Lamborghini.
http://www.canelasoftware.com/metacard.html