Ice and Ivory: the cryopolitics of mammoth de-extinction

Woolly mammoth tusk hunting has become a black-market industry in the Siberian region of Yakutia, where thawing permafrost due to climate change is revealing the bodies of thousands of mammoths. They are often in a state of incredible preservation, and their accompanying tusks can be sold to China w...

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Main Author: Charlotte A. Wrigley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 2021-10-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.librarypublishing.arizona.edu/jpe/article/id/3030/
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author Charlotte A. Wrigley
author_facet Charlotte A. Wrigley
author_sort Charlotte A. Wrigley
collection DOAJ
description Woolly mammoth tusk hunting has become a black-market industry in the Siberian region of Yakutia, where thawing permafrost due to climate change is revealing the bodies of thousands of mammoths. They are often in a state of incredible preservation, and their accompanying tusks can be sold to China where they are carved into ornaments as a marker of status. Alongside tusk hunting, another potential industry has emerged: de-extinction. Many of the mammoths found on the tundra have potentially viable DNA that might be used to resurrect a mammoth through genetic technology. Mammoth de-extinction is a cryopolitical process – a focus on the preservation and production of life at a genetic level through cold storage. 'Cryobanks' have emerged as a way to safeguard endangered and extinct species' genetic material, and forms part of a turn towards pre-empting conservation crises during what some scholars are calling the 'sixth great extinction.' The mammoth's body is broken down into pieces – tusks form luxury commodity chains, whilst flesh and blood is parceled into frozen genes and cells. The mammoth in the freezer is indicative of a reorganization of cold life in a warming world, with the specific cryopolitics found in the cryobank an attempt at extending human control over planetary processes that are now seemingly out of control. Drawing on fieldwork undertaken at the Mammoth Museum in Yakutsk, Siberia, and at the Natural History Museum's cryobank in London, I follow the mammoth from permafrost, to freezer, to back outside, and consider how her de-extinction is a response to a particular sort of future crisis –that of our own extinction.
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spelling doaj.art-740951a4c9ac4754bcbec529cd72baee2022-12-22T02:22:38ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04512021-10-0128110.2458/jpe.3030Ice and Ivory: the cryopolitics of mammoth de-extinctionCharlotte A. Wrigley0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5186-4824Laboratory of Environmental and Technological History, Higher School of EconomicsWoolly mammoth tusk hunting has become a black-market industry in the Siberian region of Yakutia, where thawing permafrost due to climate change is revealing the bodies of thousands of mammoths. They are often in a state of incredible preservation, and their accompanying tusks can be sold to China where they are carved into ornaments as a marker of status. Alongside tusk hunting, another potential industry has emerged: de-extinction. Many of the mammoths found on the tundra have potentially viable DNA that might be used to resurrect a mammoth through genetic technology. Mammoth de-extinction is a cryopolitical process – a focus on the preservation and production of life at a genetic level through cold storage. 'Cryobanks' have emerged as a way to safeguard endangered and extinct species' genetic material, and forms part of a turn towards pre-empting conservation crises during what some scholars are calling the 'sixth great extinction.' The mammoth's body is broken down into pieces – tusks form luxury commodity chains, whilst flesh and blood is parceled into frozen genes and cells. The mammoth in the freezer is indicative of a reorganization of cold life in a warming world, with the specific cryopolitics found in the cryobank an attempt at extending human control over planetary processes that are now seemingly out of control. Drawing on fieldwork undertaken at the Mammoth Museum in Yakutsk, Siberia, and at the Natural History Museum's cryobank in London, I follow the mammoth from permafrost, to freezer, to back outside, and consider how her de-extinction is a response to a particular sort of future crisis –that of our own extinction.http://journals.librarypublishing.arizona.edu/jpe/article/id/3030/De-extinctionpermafrostArcticcryopoliticsrewilding
spellingShingle Charlotte A. Wrigley
Ice and Ivory: the cryopolitics of mammoth de-extinction
Journal of Political Ecology
De-extinction
permafrost
Arctic
cryopolitics
rewilding
title Ice and Ivory: the cryopolitics of mammoth de-extinction
title_full Ice and Ivory: the cryopolitics of mammoth de-extinction
title_fullStr Ice and Ivory: the cryopolitics of mammoth de-extinction
title_full_unstemmed Ice and Ivory: the cryopolitics of mammoth de-extinction
title_short Ice and Ivory: the cryopolitics of mammoth de-extinction
title_sort ice and ivory the cryopolitics of mammoth de extinction
topic De-extinction
permafrost
Arctic
cryopolitics
rewilding
url http://journals.librarypublishing.arizona.edu/jpe/article/id/3030/
work_keys_str_mv AT charlotteawrigley iceandivorythecryopoliticsofmammothdeextinction