A photo taken on 27th September 1911 of two male thylacines (an adult in the background, and a juvenile in the foreground) at the Beaumaris Zoo (SB) in Hobart, Tasmania. This photograph is often wrongly cited as being that of a male and female. [1]
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Short title
AUSTRALIA-SCIENCE-ANIMAL-DNA
Credit/Provider
AFP/Getty Images
Author
Handout, AFP
Source
UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE
Date and time of data generation
12:56, 20 May 2008
Image title
This undated handout photo received on May 20, 2008 from the University of Melbourne shows two Tasmanian Tigers before their extinction in the 1930s. Scientists said on May 20, 2008 they had "resurrected" a gene from the extinct Tasmanian tiger by implanting it in a mouse, raising the long-term possibility of bringing animals such as dinosaurs back to life. In what they describe as a world first, researchers from Australian and US universities extracted a gene from a preserved specimen of the doglike marsupial -- formally known as a thylacine -- and revived it in a mouse embryo. RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE GETTY OUT AFP PHOTO/UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE (Photo credit should read AFP/AFP/Getty Images)