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Earth Science

Doomsday Vault: First Tree Samples Arrive At Underground Seed Store 55

An anonymous reader writes "The Svalbard Global Seed Vault, built into an Arctic mountain, received its first delivery of tree seeds. Opened in 2008, the vault is designed to withstand all natural and human disasters. From the article: "The 'doomsday' vault built into an Arctic mountain, which stores seeds for food crops in case of a natural disaster, has received its first delivery of tree samples. Norway spruce and Scots pine seeds have arrived at the frozen vault, which is located on Svalbard, an archipelago owned by and north of Norway. The organizations behind the vault hope to bring more seeds from outside of the Nordic countries. The Svalbard Global Seed Vault will now look after the samples and use them to monitor how natural forests change. They will also keep them as back-ups, in case any of the species are lost, and to see how the forests change during breeding."
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Doomsday Vault: First Tree Samples Arrive At Underground Seed Store

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  • by QilessQi ( 2044624 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @02:34PM (#49166391)

    I'm pretty sure Aperture Science used the same architect.

    • by TimSSG ( 1068536 )

      I'm pretty sure Aperture Science used the same architect.

      So far your post is the only one good. I hope some more good posts happen or it going to look like Slashdot has gone to seed. Tim S.

      • by TWX ( 665546 )
        At the time I post this there are fifteen comments rated zero and above. None of them are really worth reading. Slashdot has indeed gone to something, but the only things it has in-common with 'seed' are the first letter and the same number of characters.
    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Wow. I don't know where to begin with all of the inaccuracies and impossibilities in that video. It was clearly made by someone with a very vivid imagination and a serious lack of actual scientific knowledge. All capped off by an inattention to detail. Here's the 10 most obvious flaws (to me, at least):

      1) When the asteroid is approaching Earth, why is it glowing as if it's already on fire? It's a big ball of space rock. The burning wouldn't begin for a few million more miles as it enters the atmosphere.
      2) T

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Mr President, we must not allow a Doomsday-Vault gap!

  • "Man is the only animal that plans for doomsday. Or needs to.”

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      "Man is the only animal that plans for doomsday. Or needs to.”

      One could argue the dinosaurs might have needed to plan for doomsday as well.

    • "Man is the only animal that plans for doomsday. Or needs to.â

      That worked out really well for the wooly mammoth, dodo bird, all of the dinosaurs, or anything else on this list [wikipedia.org].

      • Although TFS includes natural disasters under the category of "doomsday", I was enlisting Mr. Twain to satirize the fact that humans are perhaps more likely to cause their own extinction than the wooly mammoth, dodo bird, all of the dinosaurs, or anything else ever were. Self-extinction isn't really a proclivity that any sensible animal would have - even a dodo.

        But now that you mention it, weren't humans also responsible for most of the recent extinctions on your list? (We can't take the blame for the rea

        • by matfud ( 464184 )

          Us humans are really good at killing things. If it is profitable we can use and abuse it until it is totally gone. Hurm why do I fear that some things do not change.

  • So, I guess we know where the cataclysmic meteor will strike!

    • by pspahn ( 1175617 )

      We've known for awhile. Slashdot Beta seems to have been rolled out and it's clear where the destruction has taken place.

      40 second page loads /.? Really?

  • They will also keep them as back-ups, in case any of the species are lost, and to see how the forests change during breeding.

    Tree porn! Yeah!

  • Insult to injury...The world will be coming to an end, and I won't even have the comfort of knowing that, "at least all them damn pine trees are going to die too."

  • How can something be in Norway and North of Norway at the same time?

  • ... and lined with Nokia phones.
  • That sounds silly. Darwin must be turning over in his grave.
  • I'm not slightly a DNA expert, so this is a question for those who may be. But doesn't the DNA in the seeds degrade ? Does storing them in a vault protect them from stuff that makes them degrade? if not too expensive, the concept is interesting. tho, with our nascent ability to inject DNA into another cel, wouldn't we be better off storing both the seed, and a copy of the dna for that seed, stored digitally (or carved in stone).
    • I'm not slightly a DNA expert, so this is a question for those who may be. But doesn't the DNA in the seeds degrade ? Does storing them in a vault protect them from stuff that makes them degrade?

      Quoting the Wikipedia article on seed banks [wikipedia.org]:

      Depending on the species, seeds are dried to a suitably low moisture content according to an appropriate protocol. Typically this will be less than 5%. The seeds then are stored at -18C or below. Because seed RNA (like our DNA) degrades with time, the seeds need to be periodically replanted and fresh seeds collected for another round of long-term storage.

      The bad news is that recalcitrant seeds [wikipedia.org] can't be stored this way, so no cocoa, mango, avocado, or rubber.

    • by cdrudge ( 68377 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @04:23PM (#49167137) Homepage

      They will still age and degrade, but the cold temperatures and lack of oxygen due to their packaging prolong the process. It's kind of like a sealed or open package in your fridge and freezer. The better sealed and the colder stored, the longer whatever it is will last...but only up to a point.

      Depending on the seed type it may only be a relatively short time, say a dozen or two years, or it may be decades or much much longer for a more hardy seed. Whatever that time limit is, seeds can be rotated out, planted, and hopefully new generations grown to be refrozen perpetuating the cycle.

  • Scandinavians (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Grishnakh ( 216268 ) on Monday March 02, 2015 @04:35PM (#49167237)

    Here again, the Scandinavians prove they are the most superior culture on the planet. While much larger nations with far more resources are spending on their resources on military adventurism and weapons systems (including nations who also have possessions far north of the Arctic Circle, namely Russia), the Scandinavians have the highest quality of life in the world and are looking out for the future with this seed vault.

    • Re:Scandinavians (Score:4, Interesting)

      by jandersen ( 462034 ) on Tuesday March 03, 2015 @05:47AM (#49170151)

      Here again, the Scandinavians prove they are the most superior culture on the planet

      As a Dane, I can confirm this in full; also, we are tall, blond, honest and noble.

      However, we are not the only ones to have a seed bank - Wikipedia lists 5 major facilities: The millennium Seed Bank in UK, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, the Australian PlantBank, the Vavilov Institute of Plant Industry and National Center for Genetic Resources Preservation in the US, as well as several smaller ones in India.

C'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas l'Informatique. -- Bosquet [on seeing the IBM 4341]

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