Cloning In Jurassic Park

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Is the cloning of an extinct species possible and realistic? In Jurassic Park, there are a lot of things going on, having to do with bioethics, biology, and engineering. Today, the cloning of dinosaurs is not widely discussed. Who knows what might be going on behind the scenes? There are a lot of factors contributing to the cloning of dinosaurs, and many unanswered questions. The cloning of dinosaurs is a hazardous experiment. In Jurassic Park, the dinosaurs were cloned using many scientifically involved experiments. In this movie many problems occur. Should this be tried today?
In Jurassic park, the dinosaurs were created simply by extracting DNA from a mosquito that had been fossilized in amber. Amber is fossilized tree resin, not sap. The scientist injected a needle …show more content…

No, absolutely not. In the movie, it quotes “dinosaurs had their chance, and nature selected them for extinction.” I don’t agree that nature per say selected them for extinction, I think God did. First of all, why recreate something that God took off the earth in the first place? Second, dinosaurs are very dangerous. If they were still roaming the earth, they would be at the top of the food chain, the best predator. That’s dangerous to humans first of all, and other species. Thirdly, there would be many dangers. It would be dangerous to our homes, our cars, our society, and other animals. I’m not sure how they would really help us, were doing fine without them here. I don’t really think today’s world would be unfair to them per se, but just different. Dinosaurs would have the same food sources, and very limited predators. Concerning the limits, you can’t totally control that, nature has its way around things sometimes, and humans are prone to mistakes. The scientist in Jurassic park made a mistake, by using frog DNA, because they forgot about its ability to change genders. So who are we to say that everything would work