Not
quite the Biblical Noah’s Ark, but possibly the next best thing. Moscow State
University has secured Russia’s largest-ever scientific grant to collect the
DNA of every living and extinct creature for the world’s first database of its
kind. “I
call the project ‘Noah’s Ark.’ It will involve the creation of a depository – a
databank for the storing of every living thing on Earth, including not only
living, but disappearing and extinct organisms. This is the challenge we have
set for ourselves,” MSU
rector Viktor Sadivnichy told journalists.
The
gigantic ‘ark’, set to be completed by 2018, will be 430 sq km in size, built
at one of the university’s central campuses. “It will enable us to
cryogenically freeze and store various cellular materials, which can then
reproduce. It will also contain information systems. Not everything needs to be
kept in a petri dish,” Sadivnichy
added.
The
university’s press office has confirmed that the resulting database will
contain collected biomaterials from all of MSU’s branches, including the
Botanical Garden, the Anthropological Museum, the Zoological Museum and others.
All of the university’s departments will be involved in research and collation
of materials. The program, which has received a record injection of 1 billion
rubles (US$194 million), will promote participation by the university’s younger
generation of scientists.
Sadovnichy
also said that the bank will have a link-up to other such facilities at home,
perhaps even abroad. “If it’s realized, this will be a leap in Russian
history as the first nation to create an actual Noah’s Ark of sorts,” the rector said.
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