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"This category [science fiction] excludes rocket ships that make U-turns, serpent men of Neptune that lust after human maidens, and stories by authors who flunked their Boy Scout merit badge tests in descriptive astronomy."
- Robert Heinlein

Mammontelephas  
  A 'mammoth' resurrected from the genes of the original.  

Baby's brow fur was long and oily, and gave off a pungent, tangy, yet somehow pleasant odor. The worldwide network of genetic arks had a surfeit of pachyderms, even this new breed - "Mammontelephas" - with half of its genes salvaged from a 20,000-year-old cadaver exposed by the retreating Canadian tundra.
Technovelgy from Earth, by David Brin.
Published by Bantam in 1990
Additional resources -

Take a look at this real-life use of this strategy; will there be a 'Pleistocene Park' For Woolly Mammoths?.

These beasties may remind you a little of the alien Fithp from Footfall by Niven and Pournelle.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from Earth
  More Ideas and Technology by David Brin
  Tech news articles related to Earth
  Tech news articles related to works by David Brin

Mammontelephas-related news articles:
  - 'Pleistocene Park' For Woolly Mammoths?
  - Spider Blood In Amber Brings Jurassic Park Closer
  - Woolly Mammoths To Be Created For 'Pleistocene Park'?
  - Bring Back Extinct Animals! Sort of.

Articles related to Biology
Let's Make Slaver Sunflowers! Engineering Plants To Reflect Light
Machete-Wielding Philodendron Isn't Going To Take It Anymore
Tsunami Forecasts Improved By Ionosphere Signals
EctoLife Concept Video Artificial Womb For Baby Mass Production

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