As safe as can be - no worries here. From the UK Telegraph:
Scientists to reanimate 30,000-year-old 'giant virus' found in Siberia
Scientists said they will reanimate a 30,000-year-old giant virus unearthed in the frozen wastelands of Siberia, and warned climate change may awaken dangerous microscopic pathogens.
Reporting this week in the flagship journal of the US National Academy of Sciences, French researchers announced the discovery of Mollivirus sibericum, the fourth type of prehistoric virus found since 2003 – and the second by this team.
Before waking it up, researchers will have to verify that the bug cannot cause animal or human disease.
To qualify as a "giant", a virus has to be longer than half a micron, a thousandth of a millimetre (0.00002 of an inch).
Mollivirus sibericum – "soft virus from Siberia" – comes in at 0.6 microns, and was found in the permafrost of northeastern Russia.
Of course, being the Telegraph, they have to bleat about climate change:
Climate change is warming the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions at more than twice the global average, which means that permafrost is not so permanent any more.
Meanwhile, the arctic ice extent is larger than historical average (in other words, it's cold up there - days are getting shorter and the temperature is falling faster than normal).
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