Frozen worms in frost soil for 42,000 years
Scientists have made the quest Roundworms in the frosty land in two areas of cyberspace have returned to life in Petri dishes. These worms have been frozen in permafrost for ten thousand years, since the Pleistocene period. The scientists working on the research said 300 types of prehistoric worms were analyzed and both were able to contain viable nematodes.
Nematodes showed signs of life after being neglected. Scientists say the worms began to move and then ate again. One of the worms found in the old squirrel digs in the wall of the Devani Yar bulge at the lower reaches of the Colima River. This worm is 32,000 years old.
The other worm found in frosty soil near the Alazeya River in 2015 is about 41,700 years old. These two nematodes are the oldest living animals on the planet and are believed to be both females. Worms returned to life in a laboratory at the Institute of Physical and Chemical Sciences in Soil Science.
Scientists say that the ability of worms to survive tens of thousands of years in the science of inventory in natural conditions these nematodes can have adaptive mechanisms that can be valuable in science such as chemistry, microbiology, and space science.
There were several institutions involved in research including the Institute of Physical and Chemical Problems and Biology in Soil Science. Moscow State University, and the Department of Earth Sciences at Princeton University. This reminds me of John Carpenter's "The Thing."
Frozen 42,000-Year-Wise Bugs In Siberia
In the Daily Mail report, scientists have managed to get it back as frozen insects for some 42,000 years.
Near Moscow, Russian researchers of the Physico-Chemical and Biological Problems of Soil Science Institute have experimented.
Frozen worms in frost soil for 42,000 years
They melted ice and revived two spheres found in Siberia. Worms lived on the time of woolen giant
Researchers believe that the attractive experiment shows "the ability of multi-cellular organisms to survive long", the report says.
Of the 300 prehistoric insects reported about the report, the study was investigated, only two "viable nematodes were shown".
It is believed that one of the insects was 41,700 years old, was found near the Alajeya River in 2015. The second, which was considered as 32,000, was discovered in a prehistoric squirrel bore in the Duvani Yar Outcrop near the Colma River in 2002.
It can help to increase the areas of astrology and chronics. In the field of chronics, people have long been expected to free the body of people.
The goal is to keep them frozen for long periods of purpose for long-term interdisciplinary exploration.