Topic: After 32,000 Years, an Ice Age Flower Blooms Again

mightymoe's photo
Thu 08/23/12 07:41 PM
Eric A. Powell
Discover Magazine
Wed, 22 Aug 2012 16:50 CDT


Deep in the frozen tundra of northeastern Siberia, a squirrel buried fruits some 32,000 years ago from a plant that bore white flowers. This winter a team of Russian scientists announced that they had unearthed the fruit and brought tissue from it back to life. The fruits are about 30,000 years older than the Israeli date palm seed that previously held the record as the oldest tissue to give life to healthy plants.

The researchers were studying ancient soil composition in an exposed Siberian riverbank in 1995 when they discovered the first of 70 fossilized Ice Age squirrel burrows, some of which stored up to 800,000 seeds and fruits. Permafrost had preserved tissue from one species - a narrow-leafed campion plant - exceptionally well, so researchers at the Russian Academy of Sciences recently decided to culture the cells to see if they would grow. Team leader Svetlana Yashina re-created Siberian conditions in the lab and watched as the refrigerated tissue sprouted buds that developed into 36 flowering plants within weeks.

This summer Yashina's team plans to revisit the tundra to search for even older burrows and seeds.



Kahurangi's photo
Thu 08/23/12 08:03 PM
Smart squirrels :-)

ShugahBee's photo
Thu 08/23/12 08:07 PM
Its a fragile looking flower
and its pretty..interesting

Squirels lol reminds me
of the ice age movie that
makes me laugh laugh

Queene123's photo
Thu 08/23/12 08:22 PM
actually a number of yrs ago
they found a strawberry planted that was blooming