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The original would have been quite a thing to see back when there were lots of them, they must have been incredibly successful predators and that's probably why early settlers were so terrified of them that they hunted them all out.Making one animal look like another (like the Elephants -> Mammoths example) doesn't re-create the original animal. It makes a version of the modern animal that looks different.
I Am Not An Expert, but I know there was a thylacine kept in the Hobart zoo for some years until it died. Most of it was preserved for study, and I would think that plenty of DNA would be available for cloning or to confirm the complete genome. The fact that there are pieces of a recently living example is likely the reason it has so much focus. There MAY still be living examples. People in Tasmania still report occasional sightings. And from my having spent time traipsing around in the wilds there, I am not surprised that some could still remain hidden. The areas I worked in are pretty much the definition Forest Primeval. Dense, wild, impenetrable, almost claustrophobic. Loved it.
Yes. I agree, based on what I have read. I am also jealous that you’ve been there. I would have loved to go.I Am Not An Expert, but I know there was a thylacine kept in the Hobart zoo for some years until it died. Most of it was preserved for study, and I would think that plenty of DNA would be available for cloning or to confirm the complete genome. The fact that there are pieces of a recently living example is likely the reason it has so much focus. There MAY still be living examples. People in Tasmania still report occasional sightings. And from my having spent time traipsing around in the wilds there, I am not surprised that some could still remain hidden. The areas I worked in are pretty much the definition Forest Primeval. Dense, wild, impenetrable, almost claustrophobic. Loved it.