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Colossal launches with $15 million to bring back woolly mammoths
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This startup plans to bring the woolly mammoth back from extinction
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A woolly mammoth, an elephant and a scientist walk into a bar…
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Then the pandemic hit.
Suddenly change was demanded, not suggested. Challenges mounted on top of the already heavy weight borne by church communities. Some of the pastors in our cohorts saw their budgets free-fall as their congregants’ budgets did the same. When churches switched to Zoom or Facebook services, those whose participation had been hanging by a thread dropped off completely. Those without reliable internet access were cut off from church life even if they didn’t want to be. The prospect of attracting non-churchgoers to become regular tithing members disappeared almost entirely. So too the notion of being creatively “invitational” grew dim in a world where church buildings could no longer stand in for being church.
Washington Free Beacon A woolly mammoth replica / Wikimedia Commons Scientist plans to clone mammoth, said CNN in 2011.
National Geographic ran a series of confident headlines, including 2017 s We Could Resurrect the Woolly Mammoth. Here s How. In 2018, History.com reported, Scientists Say They Could Bring Back Woolly Mammoths Within Two Years. It s more than two years later, and the mammoths have not returned. So how close are we to seeing a species brought back from extinction?
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The short answer: Mammoths are likely as far away as they ve ever been. But global efforts to bring them back continue, fueled by the same fervor that launched efforts over a decade ago. And labs continue to make scientific breakthroughs, from assembling almost the entire mammoth genome to growing hair and fat out of petri dishes.