Russian Scientists Are Trying to Revive Wooly Mammoths to Halt Siberia’s Warming Crisis

The prehistoric animals could diffuse the Arctic’s ticking carbon bomb

Marcello Rossi
Future Human

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A woolly mammoth skeleton is displayed at Summers Place Auctions on November 26, 2014 in Billingshurst, England. Photo: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

On a warm afternoon in the northeastern Siberian region of Yakutia, farther north than most humans care to live, Sergey Zimov stood below an eroding mudbank along the Kolyma River. He reached down by his feet and drove a metal rod into the spongy ground that sucked at his boots, hitting what lies a few feet beneath the surface: a layer of frozen soil that’s as hard as rock — and arguably as dangerous as dynamite.

Arctic permafrost holds up to 1,600 gigatons of carbon, roughly twice what’s in the atmosphere. Temperatures across the region are warming more than twice as fast as the rest of the world, and as this ground melts, it’s releasing masses of carbon that have been locked in frozen dirt for millennia. When it joins with the microbes in the air, the carbon oxidizes, entering the atmosphere as carbon dioxide and methane — the chief greenhouse gases that contribute to a warmer climate.

Current models suggest the permafrost could lose up to 20% of its stored carbon — and even that could take as long as 80 years. But disturbing signs are emerging that the rate of permafrost thawing is accelerating as the planet warms. A sudden…

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Marcello Rossi
Future Human

Freelance writer. My works appeared in National Geographic, The Economist, The Guardian, BBC, Al Jazeera, Nature, Smithsonian, Reuters, among many others.