Instructions:  Conduct research about a recent current event using credible sources. Then, compile what you’ve learned to write your own hard or soft news article. Minimum: 250 words. Feel free to do outside research to support your claims.  Remember to: be objective, include a lead that answers the...

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In the days that the wooly mammoth roamed the chilling lands of the Earth, a small pair of roundworms became frozen in the Siberian Permafrost.

Millennia later, this pair of roundworms proved to scientists that life could be stopped and put into pause almost “indefinitely.”

5 years ago, Anastatia Shatilovich, a scientist from the Institute of Physicochemical and Biological Problems in Soil Science RAS in Russia, dug out two female roundworms from a burrow dug by gophers, burrowing rodents of the family Geomyidae, in the Arctic.

Buried approximately 130 feet in the permafrost, a thick subsurface layer of soil that remains frozen throughout the year, occurring chiefly in polar regions, was brought back to life simply by putting it in water, stated by a news release from the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics in Germany. According to The New York Times, “The worms, which were buried approximately 130 feet in the permafrost, were revived simply by putting them in water,” This shows that although this process of “pausing life” could seem very complicated, the process is actually very simple.

Dr. Kurzchalia, a Professor Emeritus at the Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics in Germany who was involved in the study said, “The major take-home message or summary of this discovery is that it is, in principle, possible to stop life for more or less an indefinite time and then restart it.”

One study, by Dr. Philipp Schiffer of the Institute for Zoology at the University of Cologne, said that we could learn and be educated by the adaptation of organisms to extreme environmental conditions. Dr. Philipp states, “In times of global warming we can learn a lot about adaptation to extreme environmental conditions from these organisms, informing conservation strategies and protecting ecosystems from collapsing.”

The discovery of these two female roundworms has potentially led to us learning more about the adaptations of these organisms, and how they resisted the rough conditions that they had to go through.

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