Hamsters and rats can be frozen and reanimated by microwaves:

https://youtu.be/2tdiKTSdE9Y

It was theorized that it would work with larger mammals but the technical
problem is heating the entire animal all at once.

Contrary to the common belief that microwaves heat from the inside out,
they heat from the outside in.

Jason

On Sun, Jul 30, 2023, 7:30 AM John Clark <johnkcl...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Sun, Jul 30, 2023 at 12:15 AM 'spudboy...@aol.com' via Everything List
> <everything-list@googlegroups.com> wrote:
>
> *<You sir, have been something of an enthusiast for the Big Chill as a
>> means of survival, so this looks like evidence to me that you may be
>> correct? *
>>
>
> It's favorable evidence but it doesn't prove that human Cryonics will
> work, however it certainly proves that the old cliché that claims freezing
> and then thawing a cell always turns it into undifferentiated mush is not
> true.  Human Cryonics will be proven to work on the very day it becomes
> obsolete and is no longer needed, the day that Drexler style Nanotechnology
> becomes available .
>
> John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis
> <https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>
>
> )^&
>
>
>
> Scientists have brought back to life Nematode worms that have been buried
>> 130 feet under the Siberian permafrost for between 45,839 and 47,769  years
>> according to Carbon-14 tests. Researchers at the Max Planck Institute in
>> Germany have now bred these worms for over 100 generations (worm
>> generations are about 10 days long) and they say it is a species of
>> Nematode that has never been seen before. They call it "Panagrolaimus
>> kolymaensis". The lead researcher says:
>>
>> *"Basically, you only have to bring the worms into amenable conditions,
>> on a culture (agar) plate with some bacteria, some humidity and room
>> temperature, they just start crawling around then. They also just start
>> reproducing. In this case this is even easier, as it is an all-female
>> (asexual) species. They don‘t need to find males and have sex, they just
>> start making eggs, which develop."*
>>
>> A novel nematode species from the Siberian permafrost shares adaptive
>> mechanisms for cryptobiotic survival with C. elegans dauer larva
>> <https://journals.plos.org/plosgenetics/article?id=10.1371/journal.pgen.1010798>
>>
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