The Colossal "woolly mouse" has fur similar to the thick hair that kept woolly mammoths warm during the last ice age. (Image credit: Colossal) This week, biotechnology company Colossal Biosciences ...
Say hello to the wooly devil. The type of sunflower is a new plant species, identified in Big Bend National Park in Texas. Ovicula biradiata, as it is formally known, is especially notable for being ...
Using high-tech genetic engineering, they aim to bring back distinguishing features of extinct animals such as the woolly mammoth—while not actually bringing the species itself back to life.
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The name woolly devil is quite intimidating for a tiny plant. The largest reached 3 inches across, while the smallest was less than half an inch. So far, it has only been spotted in one section of ...
It's been 4,000 years since the woolly mammoth roamed the Earth, but could this extinct species make a comeback? Some scientists in Texas say they're working on it and they're going to use mice to ...
Contemporary dance choreographer and company founder Dana Tai Soon Burgess produced the dance concert “An Asian American Dance Journey” for a three-day run at the Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company.
In a significant breakthrough in de-extinction science, Texas-based bioengineering company Colossal Biosciences has successfully created genetically modified mice with thick, woolly coats—dubbed ...
Scientists at Colossal Biosciences, a US biotechnology company, have recently announced that they have successfully created genetically modified mice with woolly coats in a development they say ...
A US biotech company successfully edited genes in mouse embryos to produce thick, woolly hair, marking a step towards creating a mammoth-like elephant. Colossal Biosciences aims to use similar ...
The woolly mice also contain a truncated version of the FABP2 gene that is associated ... Moreover, scientists like Robin Lovell-Badge, head of the Stem Cell Biology and Developmental Genetics ...