arcticpenguin
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2002
- Messages
- 5,687
We had a thread while back about recovering DNA from fossils, but I can't find it. Anyway, there is a new study which claims to have identifed plant DNA between 300 and 400 thousand years old.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2949629.stm
They also claim to have found DNA from vaious animals like lemmings, mammoth, reindeer, bison and horse.
So how did they do it, did they use a new extraction technique on old fossils? No! They didn't use fossils. They dug up some dirt from the permafrost.
I am rather skeptical of this. So far I have not seen the original article, just descriptions of their findings. I would like to know what safeguards and controls they used. I'd also like to know what they didn't find - for example, did they try searching for kangaroo DNA? If they had found that in Siberia I would doubt their other findings as well.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2949629.stm
They also claim to have found DNA from vaious animals like lemmings, mammoth, reindeer, bison and horse.
So how did they do it, did they use a new extraction technique on old fossils? No! They didn't use fossils. They dug up some dirt from the permafrost.
I am rather skeptical of this. So far I have not seen the original article, just descriptions of their findings. I would like to know what safeguards and controls they used. I'd also like to know what they didn't find - for example, did they try searching for kangaroo DNA? If they had found that in Siberia I would doubt their other findings as well.