‘World’s first de-extinction’: Dire wolves are back after 12,500 years of extinction

Dire wolves went extinct around 12,500 years ago. Now, thanks to genetic engineering, they’re back in what the scientists have described as the “world’s first de-extinction.”

Scientists at Colossal Biosciences, a biotech-based conservation company best known for trying to bring back woolly mammoths, say they have successfully produced three dire wolf (Aenocyon dirus) pups. They did this by reconstructing the wolf’s genome from ancient DNA, identifying versions of genes seen only in dire wolves and not in the extinct carnivores’ living relatives.

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