Jurassic Park syndrome

Jurassic Park syndrome
n.
The belief that extinct animal species can be resurrected via cloning or other genetic techniques.
Example Citation:
The news flash several weeks ago was tantalizing: Australian Museum director Michael Archer announced that the thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger — an exquisite creature presumed extinct for 50 years — could be "kick started" back to life. Archer claimed that cloning techniques could be applied to newly discovered baby tiger specimens that had been pickled in alcohol rather than a formaldehyde solution, which damages genetic material.
In fact, Archer, who has a specimen that dates back to 1866, boasted recently in an interview with the BBC that within 50 years it will be possible to walk out of a pet store with a Tasmanian tiger on a leash.
Web sites at ABC, CBS, and CNN hyped the news to the hilt. "I call this the Jurassic Park syndrome," says Michael Hutchins, director of conservation and science for the American Zoo and Aquarium Association. The movie, which brought velociraptors and a brontosaurus back to life on screen, seems to have inspired a number of assertions that extinct animals really can be cloned including the woolly mammoth, the giant sloth, and the quagga, a partially-striped variety of zebra.
— Vicki Croke, "Reports of tiger's return greatly exaggerated," The Boston Globe, June 21, 1999
Earliest Citation:
Researchers have produced two monkeys with a procedure similar to that used to clone a sheep in Scotland a development expected to help research into AIDS, alcoholism, depression and other illnesses.
The cloning of the rhesus monkey is less dramatic than the cloning of the sheep because primitive embryos were duplicated, rather than adult animals. But it marks the first time the technique has been used to reproduce animals so closely akin to humans. ...
And while the cloning of adult humans is a more distant possibility, the scientists are well aware of the specter they have raised.
''The idea that there is a rich person who is a maverick or an eccentric or worse out on some island is what we call the Jurassic Park syndrome,'' said Russ Meintz, director of the Center for Gene Research and Biotechnology at Oregon State University. ''It's more science fiction than reality.''
— Bob Baum, "International news," The Associated Press, March 2, 1997
Related Words: Categories:

New words. 2013.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Biological issues in Jurassic Park — Jurassic Park , a book by Michael Crichton, with a film version directed by Steven Spielberg, revolves around the resurrection of dinosaurs via genetic engineering. Scientists and enthusiasts have brought up a number of issues with facts and… …   Wikipedia

  • de-extinction — n. The artificial recreation of a previously extinct species. Example Citations: It s a process known as de extinction and the genomic research that lies at the heart of it is much closer to reality today than the science fiction of dinosaurs… …   New words

  • Pets and Animals — animal hoarding ape diet assisted migration barkitecture bear jam black dog syndrome bug cattalo …   New words

  • Genetics — biohacker biopharming bioprivacy blooding bug cheapdate contraceptive corn crazy tobacco …   New words

  • biohacker — (BY.oh.hak.ur) n. A hobbyist who tinkers with DNA and other aspects of genetics. Also: bio hacker. biohack n., v. biohackerdom n. Example Citations: Robotics is hardly the only emergent industry that can expect the embrace of the techno… …   New words

  • charismatic megafauna — n. Animals that have popular appeal and so can form the basis of conservation campaigns and fundraising drives. Example Citation: Giant pandas are charismatic megafauna, a category that includes whales and other sea mammals, salmon and other… …   New words

  • frozen zoo — (FROH.zuhn zoo) n. A collection of cryogenically frozen tissue samples from rare plants and animals. Example Citation: Today, in a complex of laboratories built within unassuming red roofed barns, Wildt is summoning the tools of cryo preservation …   New words

  • hyper-evolution — n. Extremely rapid evolution, particularly as a result of man made factors; extremely rapid change. Also: hyperevolution. Example Citations: Will global warming speed the pace of evolution as plants and animals adapt to a hotter world? Scientists …   New words

  • megadiversity — n. A large number and wide range of species; exceptional biological diversity. megadiverse adj. Example Citations: Only five percent of the coral reefs in the Philippines, one of the world s 17 megadiversity nations, are in excellent condition… …   New words

  • neo-creo — (NEE.oh CREE.oh) n. A person who believes in a form of creationism in which the variety and scope of life is said to be the result of intelligent design rather than natural selection. Example Citation: In the early 1990 s, however, a new breed of …   New words

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”