Amaze Lab on MSN
Frozen wolf puppy’s last meal reveals new woolly rhino genome 400 years before extinction
A wolf puppy's frozen stomach contents have upended theories on the woolly rhinoceros extinction, revealing a genetically healthy population that vanished abruptly around 14,000 years ago.
A newly published paper in Nature describes the complex process of launching a nine-country collaboration in Africa to ...
A 14,400-year-old wolf puppy’s last meal is shedding light on the last days of one of the Ice Age’s most iconic megafauna ...
An unusual DNA source shows woolly rhinos did not slowly decline genetically, pointing instead to rapid climate warming.
Polyploid genomes, formed through repeated whole-genome duplication and hybridization, underpin the evolution of many important crops, yet their internal structure often remains unresolved when ...
The digested meat from the wolf pup’s last meal, which took place a staggering 14,400 years ago, contained enough DNA from ...
The work marks the first time an Ice Age animal’s complete genome has been recovered from tissue preserved inside another ...
About 14,400 years ago, a weeks-old wolf puppy ate its last meal – meat from a woolly rhinoceros – shortly before dying on ...
A whole-genome sequencing approach shows early promise over current commercial methods for identifying more patients likely ...
Understanding human gene function in living organisms has long been hampered by fundamental differences between species.
Genetic disorders occur due to alterations in the primary genetic material—deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)—of an organism.
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