Can Neanderthals be cloned?

When asked if it was possible to clone a Neanderthal, Neanderthal Genome Project leader Svante Paabo told the Associated Press, "Starting from the DNA extracted from a fossil, it is and will remain impossible. There is not really an improvement on current technologies that would make that possible."
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Is it ethical to clone Neanderthals?

However, the ethics of cloning extinct species varies; for example, cloning mammoths and Neanderthals is more ethically problematic than conservation cloning, and requires more attention. Cloning Neanderthals in particular is likely unethical and such a project should not be undertaken.
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Can Neanderthals breed with humans?

As shown in an interbreeding model produced by Neves and Serva (2012), the Neanderthal admixture in modern humans may have been caused by a very low rate of interbreeding between modern humans and Neanderthals, with the exchange of one pair of individuals between the two populations in about every 77 generations.
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Can we clone caveman?

It also brings up the inevitable question: Could we clone a caveman? With no complete, fully intact DNA specimen, that scenario is still way beyond our current technology, Rubin says: "It's at the outer realm of science fiction."
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Could we revive Neanderthals?

The most likely way to bring back a Neanderthal with today's technology is to start out with a human cell and slowly, bit by bit, change it into a Neanderthal one. Most likely we would do this with something called CRISPR/Cas9. This technology makes it relatively easy to change DNA.
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Can We Clone A Neanderthal? Should We?



Why don't we clone a Neanderthal?

The Problem of DNA

One particular challenge of cloning a Neanderthal is that the oldest DNA successfully used to create a clone is DNA that had been frozen for 16 years. Neanderthal DNA, is thousands of years old, and it sequence had to be compiled from several different individual fossils.
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Who has the highest Neanderthal DNA?

East Asians seem to have the most Neanderthal DNA in their genomes, followed by those of European ancestry. Africans, long thought to have no Neanderthal DNA, were recently found to have genes from the hominins comprising around 0.3 percent of their genome.
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Do Neanderthals still exist?

Neanderthals were very early (archaic) humans who lived in Europe and Western Asia from about 400,000 years ago until they became extinct about 40,000 years ago.
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Is it good to have Neanderthal DNA?

Some people may have genes inherited from Neanderthals that reduce their risk of severe COVID-19 by 22%, a study found. But the same researchers previously found that Neanderthal DNA can also put people at higher risk of respiratory failure due to COVID-19. The inherited genes are more common in Europe and Asia.
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Can Neanderthals talk?

Its similarity to those of modern humans was seen as evidence by some scientists that Neanderthals possessed a modern vocal tract and were therefore capable of fully modern speech.
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Can extinct species be brought back?

To bring back an extinct species, scientists would first need to sequence its genome, then edit the DNA of a close living relative to match it. Next comes the challenge of making embryos with the revised genome and bringing them to term in a living surrogate mother.
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Can human be cloned?

Despite several highly publicized claims, human cloning still appears to be fiction. There currently is no solid scientific evidence that anyone has cloned human embryos.
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What was the color of the first humans?

Color and cancer

These early humans probably had pale skin, much like humans' closest living relative, the chimpanzee, which is white under its fur. Around 1.2 million to 1.8 million years ago, early Homo sapiens evolved dark skin.
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Are Neanderthals smarter?

“They were believed to be scavengers who made primitive tools and were incapable of language or symbolic thought.”Now, he says, researchers believe that Neanderthals “were highly intelligent, able to adapt to a wide variety of ecologicalzones, and capable of developing highly functional tools to help them do so.
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What color eyes did Neanderthals have?

Fair skin, hair and eyes : Neanderthals are believed to have had blue or green eyes, as well as fair skin and light hair. Having spent 300,000 years in northern latitudes, five times longer than Homo sapiens, it is only natural that Neanderthals should have developed these adaptive traits first.
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What killed Neanderthals?

We once lived alongside Neanderthals, but interbreeding, climate change, or violent clashes with rival Homo sapiens led to their demise.
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Are Neanderthals stronger than humans?

Anatomical evidence suggests they were much stronger than modern humans while they were slightly shorter than the average human: based on 45 long bones from at most 14 males and 7 females, height estimates using different methods yielded averages in the range of 164–168 cm (65–66 in) for males and 152 cm (60 in) for ...
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What are the 21 human species?

Ancient humans: What we know and still don't know about them
  • Homo habilis (“handy” man) Discovered: 1960, officially named in 1964. ...
  • Homo erectus (“upright man”) ...
  • Homo neanderthalensis (the Neanderthal) ...
  • The Denisovans. ...
  • Homo floresiensis (the “hobbit”) ...
  • Homo naledi (“star man”) ...
  • Homo sapiens (“wise man”, or “modern humans”)
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Which race is closest to Neanderthal?

Together with an Asian people known as Denisovans, Neanderthals are our closest ancient human relatives. Scientific evidence suggests our two species shared a common ancestor. Current evidence from both fossils and DNA suggests that Neanderthal and modern human lineages separated at least 500,000 years ago.
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Were Vikings Neanderthals?

The latest Viking DNA study says they're actually comprised of many ethnicities and ancestries. Meanwhile, a new study of Neanderthal DNA unearthed a surprising link to the modern human from the past, opening up a new chapter in the complex history of ancient peoples.
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What blood type were Neanderthals?

This means Neanderthal blood not only came in the form of blood type O – which was the only confirmed kind before this, based on a prior analysis of one individual – but also blood types A and B.
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Who came first Neanderthal or Homosapien?

Modern humans appeared in Europe at least 45,000 years ago. Neanderthals disappeared from Europe around 40,000 years ago.
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Can we clone mammoths?

As of date, no viable mammoth tissue or its intact genome has been found to attempt cloning. According to one research team, a mammoth cannot be recreated, but the team will try to eventually grow in an "artificial womb" a hybrid elephant with some woolly mammoth traits.
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Can extinct animals be cloned?

In 2003, researchers used cloning to bring back the bucardo, a species of wild goat, using a modern goat as a surrogate parent and egg donor. The baby bucardo, the only extinct species to ever be cloned, died after only seven minutes because of a lung malformation.
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How did cavemen mate?

Somewhere we got the idea that “caveman” courtship involved a man clubbing a woman over the head and dragging her by the hair to his cave where he would, presumably, copulate with an unconscious or otherwise unwilling woman.
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