On January 9, 2000, a forest guard discovered Celia crushed under a tree fallen in Ordesa National Park, in the Aragonese Pyrenees. With it disappears the bouquetin des Pyrénées, a subspecies present in the Franco-Spanish mountains since the Middle Ages. Three years later, a cloned female was born in a Spanish laboratory and died in less than ten minutes because she could not breathe. However, the subspecies had accomplished something unedited.
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On January 9, 2000, a forest guard discovered Celia crushed under a tree fallen in Ordesa National Park, in the Aragonese Pyrenees. With it disappears the bouquetin des Pyrénées, a subspecies present in the Franco-Spanish mountains since the Middle Ages. Three years later, a cloned female was born in a Spanish laboratory and died in less than ten minutes because she could not breathe. However, the subspecies had accomplished something unedited.