Did mammoths tell blond jokes?

Hellbuster

Junior member
  • May 4, 2006
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    The name says it all
    Wow! Talk about a blond bombshell.

    story.mammoth.locks.ap.jpg

    This illustration shows the hair color of two mammoths based on hair recovered from frozen mammoths.

    It turns out mammoths may have come in various hair colors, perhaps even red and blond, new research indicates.

    Researchers led by Holger Roempler of the University of Leipzig in Germany were able to extract DNA from a 43,000-year-old mammoth bone from Siberia.

    They report in Friday's issue of the journal Science said that the mammoth DNA included the gene Mc1r.

    That gene codes for a protein that affects hair color in humans and other mammals. Reduced activity of that gene produces red hair in humans and cows and yellow hair in mice, horses and dogs, for example.

    Thus it is possible, the researchers concluded, that mammoths existed with a variety of hair colors.
     

    nEoN_wHitE

    Active member
  • May 4, 2006
    46,638
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    Inside a neon light
    Hellbuster said:
    Wow! Talk about a blond bombshell.

    story.mammoth.locks.ap.jpg

    This illustration shows the hair color of two mammoths based on hair recovered from frozen mammoths.

    It turns out mammoths may have come in various hair colors, perhaps even red and blond, new research indicates.

    Researchers led by Holger Roempler of the University of Leipzig in Germany were able to extract DNA from a 43,000-year-old mammoth bone from Siberia.

    They report in Friday's issue of the journal Science said that the mammoth DNA included the gene Mc1r.

    That gene codes for a protein that affects hair color in humans and other mammals. Reduced activity of that gene produces red hair in humans and cows and yellow hair in mice, horses and dogs, for example.

    Thus it is possible, the researchers concluded, that mammoths existed with a variety of hair colors.
    umm saw dis in papaer.. maru ne