It was previously assumed that early hunters only killed woolly mammoths if they were already injured. The discovery of these resourceful traps firmly challenges that idea.
Archaeologists have discovered the remains of at least five woolly mammoths at a site in Austria. The remains suggest that ...
THE scientists plotting the return of the great Woolly Mammoth have successfully used gene editing technology to create a new Woolly Mouse. The extraordinary, palm-sized creature has had its DNA ...
Related: 200000-year-old 'mammoth graveyard' found in UK The Langmannersdorf site was first excavated between 1904 and 1907, and evidence of two mammoth hunter camps was unearthed in 1919 and 1920 ...
In a groundbreaking discovery, researchers analyzing scratch marks on a 39,000-year-old Woolly Mammoth have uncovered the ...
But some specialists in mammoth genetics and genome editing question whether the mice represent a significant advance in either area, let alone a milestone on the way to bringing back woolly ...
Archaeologists have made the exciting discovery of the remains of at least five mammoths during excavations in Austria.
Lamm clarifies that the company’s goal is to only license technologies for human use and to continue to focus on animal work within the company. Bringing back the mammoth would help slow the ...
Colossal Biosciences has raised over $400 million to bring the woolly mammoth back from extinction, and is betting on lucrative spinoff innovations.
Do the words "mammoth mice" sound a little oxymoronic to you? Well, in our modern age of gene editing, they simply represent a new reality. That's because scientists at Colossal Biosciences say ...
we should point out the elephant (or mammoth) in the room: Tiny fluffy mice are a far cry from the enormous tusked beasts that roamed the Earth, before succumbing to a warming planet and human ...