Direwolves reborn Jurassic Park-style? Why Jon Snow's 'best friend' isn't really back from extinction

First, scientists dug up some old bones. Fossils, actually — real direwolf teeth and skulls buried in the earth for 13,000 to 72,000 years. These bones still had tiny fragments of DNA inside — think of DNA as the instruction manual for building a creature. Of course, ancient DNA is like a book that’s been through a shredder and then set on fire, but with a lot of tech and patience, scientists can piece together a decent draft.

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