Year 2043.The planet enters systemic failure: pollinators collapse, soils are exhausted, seas turn acidic. The most ambitious solution arrives in the form of extreme biotechnology. In a remote valley beneath permanent auroras and magnetic anomalies that disorient satellites and compasses, Aurora One is established - a research complex run by the Global Green Consortium and the NordGen corporation.Its stated goal is precise and elegant: Reactivate lost ecological functions using genomics of extinct species. Paleogeneticist Elena Mora leads the recovery of DNA from fossil theropods. With advanced CRISPR, RNA matrices, and magnetized culture tanks, the team experiments with a new generation of designed organisms: resistant to heat, cold, and climatic instability. The most promising prototype is named Aurora-65.On paper, everything fits: - ethical protocols, - controlled-impact models, - scenarios of "acceptable risk". But the chosen environment is not neutral.The auroras interfere with incubation fields.Sensors record magnetic patterns no one expected.And the first results begin to deviate from the simulations. What happens in the valley is neither an amusement park nor a monster invasion, but something more unsettling: a complex system that reacts to what is being done inside it.As the project's phases advance and political pressures mount, Elena and her team must decide what is experimental noise and what is a signal they were not prepared to interpret. The question is no longer just whether we can recreate ancient life with modern tools, but what we are really activating by doing so in the planet's most magnetically unstable place... and how long it will take to spread beyond that valley.Because the first anomalies don't stay there: they affect satellites, deflect storms, alter migrations. What began as an isolated experiment starts leaving traces on maps around the world. It's a biotechnological thriller of a realistic experiment taken one step further, where science knows exactly how each tool works... but not all the planetary-scale consequences of switching them on at once.