The mammoth was an archeological find? Unless humans butchered it, you're talking about paleontology.
@Davywatson1216 ай бұрын
Bring back mammoths in time for the melting of the last glacier? Elephants have a culture, including teaching the young where to find seasonal water and food. Which foster mother is going to teach this baby mammoth to be a mammoth? 😢
@Erime6 ай бұрын
🤔 sounds a bit woolly to me
@NeilEvans-xq8ik6 ай бұрын
We could teach their community to eventually teach each other.
@cacogenicist6 ай бұрын
One of the ideas is that mammoth-ized elephants would knock over trees and dig up the ground -- such that the cold would penetrate deeper. In principle, at scale, cold weather elephants could help reduce the loss of permafrost. Bison and other megafauna are not nearly as useful for this; they don't knock trees over, for example.
@bjdefilippo4476 ай бұрын
Thanks for the interesting info. In case you're curious, the plastic tip on a shoelace is called an aglet. (Thanks, Phineas & Ferb!)
@FlubberFrosch5 ай бұрын
Or Pinke in German. (also thanks, Phineas & Ferb)
@flyingfox707b6 ай бұрын
0:49 Paleontological or Biological, not archaeological, in this context.
@thegroove20006 ай бұрын
Manipulating whats already there. Now what could be behind this all? A mysterious mover?
@alphalunamare6 ай бұрын
the commentary is so so so childish.
@RobertGotschall-y2f6 ай бұрын
Soylent Green is people.
@cacogenicist6 ай бұрын
_What does this have to do with mammals!?_ is quite a dumb response to reaearch exploring the foundations of abiogenesis. Smarter commentary, please.
@thomasbell70336 ай бұрын
Picking a few news briefs from a longer list of news.briefs does not make them "curated." I should think NS, of all institutions, would leave dumb marketing-speak alone.
@TheMemesofDestruction6 ай бұрын
Was it tasty? 🤔
@markmonaghan23096 ай бұрын
Not that interested in the jerky I'll wait for the burgers
@FlubberFrosch5 ай бұрын
The team of researchers preparing the steppe wisent mummy, known as Blue Babe, for display stewed a piece of its neck to celebrate.
@TheMemesofDestruction5 ай бұрын
@@FlubberFrosch Yummy?
@jshellenberger78766 ай бұрын
The Conway game of life. Arkansas hwy 65. Thailand Highway to Korat. Same copycat. #POW
@princessaja25576 ай бұрын
How they know it was natural considering it was just a skin that was dry.
@cacogenicist6 ай бұрын
What are you suggesting exactly?
@Rene-uz3eb6 ай бұрын
So we're going to see mammoths nice. I guess we could even breed mini dinosaurs, given that they could not grow as big in today's gravity.
@cacogenicist6 ай бұрын
If this was a Ken M-style troll, _nice._ But if you're serious, of course Earth's gravity has not changed to any remotely significant degree since dinosaurs walked the Earth. I'm inclined to give you the benefit of the doubt.
@Rene-uz3eb6 ай бұрын
You inclined wrong. Now that I think about it, it kind of seems nonsensical for a static planet to have plate tectonics. Why would there be moving plates? Whereas, if you imagine the planet was expanding (with some hollow shells somewhere), that would very well account for plate tectonics. Volcanic activity could be seen as evidence for an expanding planet.
@jesuschristt76926 ай бұрын
@@Rene-uz3ebok,even if the planet was expanding ( which is not the case),the only thing that would change is the volume,not the mass. Otherwise you should explain where and how the new mass Is generated
@Rene-uz3eb6 ай бұрын
@@jesuschristt7692 you got me I'm also assuming gravity is not only a function of mass
@selakery32976 ай бұрын
Wooly mammoths went extinct mostly due to global climate change and we're going to bring them back to go through global climate change again. Brilliant!! 🙄🙄🙄
@cacogenicist6 ай бұрын
Note that mammoths persisted the longest where there were no humans. Be skeptical of climate as a complete explanation for megafauna extinction. E.g., climate change absolutely can not explain the demise of the Columbian mammoth -- which ranged from near Mexico City to Florida, and to all of California, eastern Oregon, and over to Montana, and through Illinois to the East Coast south of Washington DC. So they were capable of making a living in a very wide range of habitats. Climate change should not have wiped them out. ... human presence in the Americas (probably starting about 25k years ago) almost certainly played a major role. And new research supports my assertion. As for mammoth-ized elephants possibly being introduced to Siberia -- one of the ideas is that they will bust up the ground and knock over trees that are moving north, which will help preserve permafrost by allowing the cold to penetrate into the ground more deeply -- we don't want melting permafrost to contribute to warming.
@Tubemanjac6 ай бұрын
The intact piece of skin probably got frozen within one natural day as a result of the huge, worldwide cataclysm appr. 20k+ years ago. It's described in the book The Adam and Eve Story - The Story of Cataclysms by Chan Thomas (1965) which has been classified for decades.
@cacogenicist6 ай бұрын
Trolling or smooth-brained? -- so hard to tell these days.