Pleistocene Park

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Pleistocene Park in the Sakha Republic in northern Siberia is an attempt by Russian researcher Sergey Zimov to reproduce the ecosystem that flourished during the last ice age, with hopes to back his theory that hunting, and not climate change, destroyed the wildlife.

Russian scientists are restoring the old ecosystem with plants and animals that thrived in the region 10,000 years ago. Japanese and Russian scientists hope to clone woolly mammoths, and to re-introduce them to the park. However, they have yet to find intact mammoth DNA to use for cloning.

So far, the scientific crew has successfully introduced reindeer, moose, musk oxen and yakut horses to the region, and the introduction of American bisons (instead of the extinct steppe bisons) is ongoing. Future introductions include saiga antelopes, yaks and siberian tigers.

Pleistocene Park is a 160 km2 scientific nature reserve (zakaznik), owned and administered by a non-profit corporation, Pleistocene Park Association, consisting of the ecologists from the Northeast Science Station in Chersky and the Grassland Institute in Yakutsk. The reserve is surrounded by a 600 km2 buffer zone that will be added to the park by the regional government, once animals have successfully established.

Animals to be introduced to the park:

Wolverine, Lynx, Amur Leopard, Asiatic Black Bear, Brown Bear, Siberian Tiger, Asian Lion or African Lion, Kodiak Bear, Muskox, American Bison, Moose, Reindeer, Elk, Wisent, Bactrian Camel, Llama or Vicuña, Yak, Saiga Antelope,

[edit] Similar projects

Rewilding Europe

[edit] Pleistocene Parks in fiction

The name "Pleistocene Park" appeared several times in pure sci-fi stories. One example is novel "Pleistocene Redemption" by Dan Gallagher. These fictional stories resembling Jurassic Park are very dissimilar to the Siberian project described above.

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