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Lord of the Rings' director Peter Jackson and his partner Fran Walsh invested $15 million in Colossal Biosciences to bring ...
Colossal Biosciences, a genetic engineering startup based in Dallas, wants to revive the moa, a flightless bird species that ...
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Indian Defence Review on MSNScientists Unveil Groundbreaking Plan to Resurrect a Giant, Dinosaur-Like SpeciesScientists are unveiling a groundbreaking plan to use DNA technology to resurrect a giant, dinosaur-like species that once roamed New Zealand.
The Synthetic Human Genome Project is working to build synthetic human DNA but who is asking how this science will impact ...
Jurassic World Rebirth opens in theaters Wednesday, July 2. There’s a story running through the “World” half of the Jurassic ...
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Controversial project could create human DNA from scratchA controversial project that aims to create the building blocks of human life has started. It was previously thought creating human DNA could lead to designer babies or unforeseen complications and ...
A genetic analysis of the waters of Loch Ness found an unusually high amount of eel DNA, indicating that Nessie may not be an elusive plesiosaur after all.
NEW YORK — A scientist who collected DNA from Scotland’s Loch Ness suggests the lake’s fabled monster might be a giant eel.
The DNA project found no evidence to support the notion that the monster is a long-necked ancient reptile called a plesiosaur (PLEE’-see-uh-sawr).
Neil Gemmell from the University of Otago in New Zealand says the project found a surprisingly high amount of eel DNA in the water.
The DNA project found no evidence to support the notion that the monster is a long-necked ancient reptile called a plesiosaur.
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