This has been reported in news.sky.com dated 4 March 2016.
The remains were in a state of near-perfect preservation because of the deep-freeze conditions of the permafrost where they lay. That has set scientists on the path to find living tissues containing DNA in the remains. If that is found, it will allow them to recreate the now extinct species.
The project has been undertaken as a joint venture by Russian and South Korean scientists at the Joint Foundation of Molecular Paleontology at North East Russia University in the city of Yakutsk which is home to a mammoth museum. Incidentally, one of the scientists Semyon Grigoriev, who is involved in the lion cub project, is also working on cloning a mammoth using the same process.
It has been decided that while the first Ice Age cave lion cub will be used for the cloning attempt, the second will be preserved in the Mammoth Museum's collection.
Image courtesy wikimediacommons.org
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