animal's remains were washed ashore in Lake Pechenelava-To and collected by villagers near Seyakha settlement. The find is a potential boost for scientists in their efforts to obtain sufficient DNA from permafrost-preserved woolly mammoths to allow the hairy giants to be brought back to life via a test tube.Now a multi-national team has gathered,with Russian, US, South Korean and Japanese scientists all reportedly working to piece together the long-gone relative of the elephant.“There is a complete head, ribs, various other bones as well as fragments of feet, soft tissues and pelt,” said Dmitry Frolov, director of Russia’s Arctic Research Centre.“According to the first information, the whole skeleton is there.“Judging by the pictures this.
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