The company seeking to bring back the woolly mammoth and other long-gone animals such as the dodo also wants to make sure schoolchildren’s interest in science doesn’t go extinct.

Colossal Laboratories and Biosciences, which has been conducting radiocarbon dating and genetic sequencing of American mammoths, has shared fossils with 55 school districts in Alaska, the genetic engineering company exclusively told USA TODAY.

The school districts get to name their fossils and can use them to learn about woolly mammoths. Radiocarbon and genetics findings related to the fossils are shared with the districts as they are finalized, the company said.

It’s part of the “Adopt a Mammoth” project to do radiocarbon dating of about 1,500 mammoth teeth, tusks and bones that are in the collection at the University of Alaska Museum of the North.

The initiative “has helped us get closer to reaching our goal of classifying the mammoth fossils in our vast collection while also getting kids interested in science and ecology from an early age,” said Matthew Wooller, a member of the Colossal Scientific Advisory Board and a mammoth researcher at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

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A ‘once-in-a-lifetime experience’

Two years ago, the journal Science published a study from Wooller and other researchers detailing how they used isotopes collected from the tusk of a 17,000-year-old mammoth to track its movements in and around the Arctic Circle during its 28-year lifetime.

Wooller’s name and his focus of study have led to some funny moments, he said.

“It’s a totally weird but kinda cool coincidence that my name Wooller matches my study organism, woolly mammoths,” he said. “In school I was sometimes mistakenly called ‘Mat Woolly.'”

Students involved in the “Adopt a Mammoth” program are getting hands-on experience with the state’s prehistoric history.