Russian scientists have grown flowering plants using seeds stored by squirrels 30,000 years ago and preserved by the Siberian permafrost, a new study showed, in what may become a key experiment in the race to revive ancient species.
The seeds of the herbaceous
Silene stenophylla are by far the oldest plant tissue to have been brought back to life, according to lead researchers Svetlana Yashina and David Gilichinsky of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
The latest findings could be a landmark in research of ancient biological material and the bid to potentially revive other species, including some that are extinct.
Silene stenophylla
You can read the rest of the news here:
Scientists, and Squirrels, Regenerate a Plant — 30,000 Years on | Haiti Chery
and here:
Scientists regenerate a plant -- 30,000 years on
Russians revive Ice Age flower from frozen burrow