Russian scientists have successfully revived the prehistoric plant Silene stenophylla, a Pleistocene flower from about 32,000 years ago, using frozen seeds found in a squirrel burrow in the Siberian permafrost. This was done to understand ancient flora and climate adaptation.

    by Intelligent-Letter68

    18 Comments

    1. Evermore, sibelmine grows on the graves of my forebears

      Said, badly remembered, by Theoden king.

      These flowers remind me of those fictional flowers from LOTR

    2. Apart-Night-9813 on

      And if every human being turns out to be allergic to the pollen and it’s a prolifically invasive species what then? I also want one as a potted plant on my desk

    3. Professional_Echo907 on

      Okay, so the zombie virus that destroys civilization is gonna start in the thawing Siberian tundra, check. 👀

    4. ContentFarmer4445 on

      I’ve had this photo saved in my phone since at least 2012. So this is old but still exciting news. 

    5. NewPhoneHewDis on

      I wanna plant it. I know either itd become INCREDIBLY invasive, or die almost instantly, but thats such a pretty flower!!

    6. Substantial_Woodsman on

      Botany of Desire… Plants know that we are suckers for unknown seeds and waiting to see what grows. Plants control us to their will and use us to spread their seeds just like other pollinators. Give into the desire, put the seed in soil.. water it. See what happens. Plants are amazing.

    7. RoosterLollipop69 on

      It is a species that currently grows naturally and has all along. More just an experiment to see if they could get ancient seeds to grow.

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