Science & technology | Windows on the past

Freeze-dried chromosomes can survive for thousands of years

They contain unprecedented detail about their long-dead parent organisms

A frozen woolly mammoth named "Yuka" is seen being prepared for display.
Chromosome like it coldPhotograph: AP

For palaeontologists, DNA is infuriatingly fragile. Its long chains begin to break apart shortly after death, destroying valuable information about the deceased parent organism. Unlike bones, footprints and even faecal matter, which can comfortably survive—in fossilised form—for millions of years, DNA rarely lasts much more than a hundred. In recent decades scientists have discovered that some exceptionally well-preserved bodies do still have readable fragments of genetic code hundreds of thousands of years after death. But these have been tiny scraps. They lack much of the valuable information that an intact genome provides.

This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Uncut and dried”

From the July 13th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Legal Amazon preservation area borders the field for soybean planting.

Deforestation is costing Brazilian farmers millions

Without trees to circulate moisture, the land is getting hotter and drier

Robot slicing a cucumber at Toyota Research Institute.

Robots can learn new actions faster thanks to AI techniques

They could soon show their moves in settings from car factories to care homes



Scientific publishers are producing more papers than ever

Concerns about some of their business models are building

The two types of human laugh

One is caused by tickling; the other by everything else

Scientists are building a catalogue of every type of cell in our bodies

It has thus far shed light on everything from organ formation to the causes of inflammation