Doomsday Vault holds key to surviving post-apocalyptic world
Digital Reporter
Saturday, March 19, 2016, 4:00 PM - On an island deep in the Norwegian Arctic lies the key to human survival.
Buried 427 feet inside a mountain, The Svalbard Global Seed Vault (also known as the Doomsday Vault,) contains copies of roughly 860,000 seeds from across the world.
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The vault is the world’s largest secure seed storage, sitting 1300 kilometres beyond the Arctic Circle.
![Image courtesy of Landbruks- og matdepartementet, Flickr.](/thumb?src=//s1.twnmm.com/images/en_ca/12/Doomsday%20Thumb-65198.jpg&w=690&h=388&scale=1&crop=1)
Image courtesy of Landbruks- og matdepartementet, Flickr.
Scientists created the Doomsday Vault in 2008 to preserve potential crops in the event of a global natural disaster. It accepts seed samples from countries all over the world, without restriction.
”Even North Korea has a deposit,” AJ+ reports.
The vault is funded by Norway and the organization Crop Trust, and saw its first-ever withdrawal in late 2015 due to the war in Syria.
The vault is otherwise locked for much of the year, accessible by only a few people in the world.
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Thumbnail image courtesy of Landbruks- og matdepartementet, Flickr.
SOURCE: AJ+ | Norwegian Government