• 🕸️ Pip 🕷️@slrpnk.net
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    10 hours ago

    And the most annoying part is that this is incredibly fcking useless. Wooly mammoths went extinct for a reason. Large animals are becoming less and less evolutionary preferred. Wooly mammoths are adjusted for the cold while our globe is warming.

    Can we just use our fcking resources for things that matter???

    • Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      Can we just use our fcking resources for things that matter???

      Yeah, bring back the passenger pigeon! We need more pigeons! Do something that’ll make a difference already!

      Also, can we get some dodos up in here? Where all my dumb birds at?

        • Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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          10 hours ago

          Yeah, as I recall they’re actually really important to the ecology of Madagascar. A native species of tree simply doesn’t grow without them. And without those trees, well you can imagine that affects a lot of things.

    • Dragonstaff@leminal.space
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      1 day ago

      Nobody cares about wooly mammoths. This is a test of gene editing techniques that can eradicate genetic diseases.

    • stephen01king@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      You’re using the same logic my dad uses to rail against going to Mars. He says there is no worthwhile reason to go there when more pressing matters on earth are in abundance.

      Just like you, he is missing the forest for the trees, angrily ignorant to the fact that the knowledge you gained from trying to achieve a seemingly worthless achievement is the actual value, not in the achievement itself.

      The achievement is just a convenient goal to make the science more exciting to the general public so as to garner more financial support from both private and government sources. Each of the steps needed to gain that achievement may not have gained as much funding as they do now if they were presented separately from that final goal.

      • scholar@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        When your house is on fire you don’t start looking for package holidays to Pompeii, no matter how much you might learn. We have all the knowledge we need to avert the climate crisis, we just need action and resources dedicated to fixing it.

        • Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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          11 hours ago

          You’ll find that we have a lot of people on this planet, we can multitask. We can research genetic engineering, and green energy, and medical technology, and recycling processes, as well as things that don’t advance those immediate goals, like microprocessors, meta materials, superconductors, astrophysics, geology, mathematics, etc.

          When your house will be burning for the next few hundred years and you still have to live in it because even on fire it’s the best house around, maybe just get on with your life and do something productive? Perhaps some of us can move out eventually, but it would take a lot of research in a lot of different fields, probably even genetics…

        • SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          23 hours ago

          What do you want the geneticists to do? They are educated in their domain, you can’t just plop them into another field

          The applications of their work is likely plenty in medicine and bioengineering

          • scholar@lemmy.world
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            12 hours ago

            I want them to stop pretending that resurrecting a cold adapted species into an ecosystem that is rapidly melting will do anything productive.

            If they want to be helpful they can work out how to engineer humans that can survive 40 degree heat and breathe co2.

            • Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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              11 hours ago

              If they want to be helpful they can work out how to engineer humans that can survive 40 degree heat and breathe co2.

              That’s what they’re fucking doing by bringing back the mammoth…

              They’ll run when they’re ready, but right now they’re learning to crawl. Or to put it differently, let them cook.

    • FoolHen@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Not really, we humans killed most big land animals that we found as we expanded our territory, back when we were hunters. This happened in big “islands” like Australia and Madagascar, as well as all the small islands. There, large animals had lived in equilibrium for centuries, and their extinction matches some short time after humans arrived. An exception are the galapago islands, as they were discovered in the 19th century.

      • Merlin@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        And to recreate the species they’d need hundreds of them from different genetic material. Which means they’ll likely create a single one that will eventually die and costed billions of dollars.

      • 🕸️ Pip 🕷️@slrpnk.net
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        1 day ago

        Besides the fact that the hunting hypothesis is that; a hypothesis, there’s a lot of other factors as to why it isn’t a good idea. Mainly, ohh idk… The fact that they have had no place in nature in over tens of thousands of years? Even if we managed to create an artificial habitat and role in an ecosystem for them, they would be very vulnerable due to megafauna’s increased minimum land requirements because of their size and in danger constantly due to climate change.