Science / John Lennon Dentist's Plan: Clone John Lennon Using Tooth Michael Zuk bought the rotting molar for $31K By Kate Seamons, Newser Staff Posted Aug 22, 2013 10:21 AM CDT Copied This Feb. 11, 1964 image provided by the David Anthony Fine Art gallery in Taos, N.M., shows a photograph of John Lennon taken by photographer Mike Mitchell. (AP Photo/David Anthony Fine Art, Mike Mitchell) Remember when a Canadian dentist bought one of John Lennon's teeth for $31,000 in November 2011? Turns out Michael Zuk wanted to do more with the molar than display it on a shelf. Zuk hopes he can use the decaying tooth to clone the dead Beatle. Seriously. Zuk explains in a press release that he has shipped the tooth to Penn State University, where scientists will hopefully "extract the genetic code." Next steps: first, scientists figure how to clone mammoths; then Zuk simply applies that technology to Lennon's DNA. No problem! One bummer for Zuk (who also own Elvis Presley's dental crown), per Canada.com: His country banned human cloning in 2004, so he'll have to continue to chase his dream outside its boundaries. Keep up with his effort at JohnLennonTooth.com. (More John Lennon stories.) Report an error