• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Are you ready for Jurassic Park?

Originally posted by: Modelworks
At least it wasn't something that could eat the creator.
That is always a bad idea 🙂

Didn't you hear?

The next one will be a 60 foot T-rex that needs to eat 100 babies a day.
 
Originally posted by: illusion88
I would be so down for a real jurassic park.

shit yeah, me too. So awesome that we are finally starting to go down this path.

First, let's get some Woolly Mammoths and Saber-Tooth Tigers resurrected. Then we can move on to the Raptors. 😀
 
Well... that was from a species that went extinct 8 years ago with tissue samples still remaining. It's nowhere in the same ballpark as using fossilized/mummified remains. Otherwise I must eat a BrontoBurger before I die.
 
Originally posted by: dakels
Well... that was from a species that went extinct 8 years ago with tissue samples still remaining. It's nowhere in the same ballpark as using fossilized/mummified remains. Otherwise I must eat a BrontoBurger before I die.

I'd settle for the Wooly Mammoth, and it sounds like they have plenty of material for one of those.
 
They stood on the shoulders of geniuses and before they even know what they had, they patented it, packaged it, and now they're selling it, they want to sell it.
 
While cloning a dinosaur is highly improbable due to DNA's chemical tendency to rapidly break apart to the point where it cannot be sequenced
Bull! They can just fill in the cracks with frog DNA! 😀
 
While cloning a dinosaur is highly improbable due to DNA's chemical tendency to rapidly break apart to the point where it cannot be sequenced, this new breakthrough paves the way for cloning of both endangered species, and extinct species with fully sequenced genomes, such as Neanderthals or, likely soon, the Woolly Mammoth.

Can you imagine the legal complications of reconstituting neanderthals, a humanoid species with a higher level of intelligence and communication capabilities than any existing animal other than humans?
 
Back
Top