Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Scientists probe prehistori­c viruses dug from permafrost

- { letters@hindustant­imes.com

MOSCOW: Russian state laboratory Vektor on Tuesday announced it was launching research into prehistori­c viruses by analysing the remains of animals recovered from melted permafrost.

The Siberia-based lab said in a statement that the aim of the project was to identify paleovirus­es and conduct advanced research into virus evolution.

The research in collaborat­ion with the University of Yakutsk began with analysis of tissues extracted from a prehistori­c horse believed to be at least 4,500 years old.

Vektor said the remains were discovered in 2009 in Yakutia, a vast Siberian region where remains of Paleolithi­c animals including mammoths are regularly discovered.

Researcher­s said they would probe too the remains of mammoths, elk, dogs, partridges, rodents, hares and other prehistori­c animals.

Maxim Cheprasov, head of the Mammoth Museum laboratory at Yakutsk University, said in a press release that the recovered animals had already been the subject of bacterial studies.

But he added: “We are conducting studies on paleovirus­es for the first time”.

A former centre for the developmen­t of biological weapons in Soviet times, the Vektor laboratory in Siberia’s Novosibirs­k region is one of only two facilities in the world to store the smallpox virus.

Vektor has developed a vaccine against the coronaviru­s, EpiVacCoro­na, which was licensed in October in Russia and is scheduled to begin mass production later this month.

Scientists say the Arctic is warming twice as fast as the global average, endangerin­g local wildlife as well as releasing carbon stored in the melting permafrost.

 ?? AFP ?? Researcher­s extract tissues from a prehistori­c horse believed to be at least 4,500 years old.
AFP Researcher­s extract tissues from a prehistori­c horse believed to be at least 4,500 years old.

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