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New vegas lazarus project

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'We're increasingly confident that the hurdles ahead are technological, not biological,' Professor Archer told The Guardian newspaper, adding that they've already begun work on cloning a Tasmanian tiger, which disappeared in the 1930s. But even a brief existence stirred excitement that this technique could lead to a way of recreating lost species. Professor Mike Archer says his team took tissue from a frog that had been dead and frozen since the 1970s and implanted it successfully in an egg from a closely related frog species. So if you heard a female gastric brooder croak, 'Excuse me while I clear my throat,' you stood back. It was not so named because it had the temperament of a Russell Crowe character, but because it gave birth through its mouth. The gastric brooder once lived in the rainforests of Queensland, Australia, and was declared extinct in 1983.

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This week scientists at the University of New South Wales' Lazarus Project announced they have reproduced the genome - that bit of biological material that carries our genetic structure - of a gastric brooding frog.

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Does that give us a lot to brood about, too? The gastric brooding frog may be coming back. This week scientists announced they have reproduced the genome of an extinct amphibian, the gastric brooding frog.