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60 MINUTES [UPDATED]
Air Date: Sunday, March 31, 2019
Time Slot: 7:00 PM-8:00 PM EST on CBS
Episode Title: (#5124) "24. 3/31: 60 Minutes"
[NOTE: The following article is a press release issued by the aforementioned network and/or company. Any errors, typos, etc. are attributed to the original author. The release is reproduced solely for the dissemination of the enclosed information.]

ON "60 MINUTES": AS GLOBAL WARMING TOUCHES THE TOP OF THE GLOBE, RUSSIAN SCIENTISTS WANT TO RECREATE THE ICE AGE TO STEM ITS EFFECTS ON THE REST OF WORLD

Permafrost in the Arctic that took hundreds of thousands of years to form is thawing at an alarming rate, threatening the release of massive and dangerous amounts of greenhouse gasses. One of the ideas scientists are pondering to combat this environmental disaster takes Scott Pelley to the top of the world to meet Sergey Zimov, who wants to return the region to the way it appeared in the Ice Age: a landscape of grassland, not forests, full of animals, including woolly mammoths. Yes, mammoths. Pelley reports from the Siberian Arctic on the next edition of 60 MINUTES, Sunday, March 31 (7:00-8:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.

Zimov, a geophysicist, has lived in the Siberian Arctic for 40 years. He remembers when he could never penetrate the soil with a shovel. Now he can dig down six feet before his shovel bangs on the permafrost. "In the past, all our soil, which was melted in summer, freeze everywhere totally... Now, in all winter it did not freeze... the permafrost is melt," he tells Pelley.

Zimov warned for years that there is more greenhouse gas in permafrost than in all of the world's remaining oil, natural gas and coal and now the scientific community has begun to listen. While there's no consensus about how much of it could be released and how quickly that will happen, Zimov is concerned about the effects of the melting permafrost in the Arctic because carbon levels there extend extremely deep, so there's so much of it to be potentially released.

Zimov's son and main collaborator, Nikita, takes Pelley into a cave about 30 feet deep, where they dug up the carbon-rich remains of plants and microbes. "It's a ticking carbon bomb, as it called," says Nikita.

The Arctic began melting because temperatures have risen worldwide in recent years from greenhouse gases and that's made the permafrost vulnerable. The Zimovs believe they can help reverse the trend by returning parts of Siberia to the Ice Age and have dubbed their experiment Pleistocene Park. Sergey Zimov tells Pelley what the area looked like then. "Not any trees. This looks like grasslands and savanna. And you will see around 1,000 of mammoths, around maybe 5,000 of bison. Around maybe 10,000 of horses," he says.

His son, Nikita has been felling trees over a 54-square-mile area and introducing yaks, a long-haired ox-like mammal that can weigh upwards of 1,000 pounds. "You need to start with something... prove people that the concept work. And to prove that concept work... you don't need millions of animals," says Nikita.

But what they really want are mammoths, and they have enlisted the help of one of the world's leading geneticists in their audacious plan.

Harvard Professor George Church has been experimenting with reviving species through their DNA at his Boston laboratory. He visited with the Zimovs this past summer and obtained DNA from mammoth bones in Siberia. But it could take some time to deliver even one woolly to the Zimovs, he tells Pelley. What separates science fact from science fiction, says Church, is that unlike the dinosaur DNA in the novel Jurassic Park, mammoth DNA is much newer and therefore potentially usable. "I would say that probably in five years we'll know whether we can get this to work for mice, and maybe pigs and elephants. And then if we can get embryos to grow in the laboratory all the way to term, then it's probably a decade."

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