Scientists Create Woolly Mice. Next up is the Mammoth That Went Extinct Around 4,000 Years Ago Animals belonging to past ...
Extinction is still forever, but scientists at the biotech company Colossal Biosciences are trying what they say is the next best thing to restoring ancient beasts — genetically engineeri ...
Bringing the woolly mammoth back to life is no easy task. But for Ben Lamm, CEO of Colossal Biosciences, the stress of the ...
Colossal Biosciences genetically engineered a ‘woolly mouse’ with mammoth traits. The milestone could inform human gene ...
Modern life makes us tired, right? But research from societies in Africa and South America suggests people in the ancient ...
What the dodo symbolizes has changed over time. It has been, variously, a parable, a joke and a warning. When we see it as an ...
The world is witnessing the greatest biodiversity loss in history, preserving the millions of threatened creatures that ...
Recently, an outgoing pup named Lentil found himself in a difficult situation. He’d been abandoned, tied to a pole in ...
There were no unintended consequences except adorability,” Colossal CEO and co-founder Ben Lamm told IFLScience.
This was an alarming start to the idea of gene de-extinction. As we know from movies like The Thing, digging up frozen ...
Colossal Biosciences just engineered woolly-haired mice in a step toward reviving extinct animals like the woolly mammoth—here's what it means.
Tiny lab mice just got a mammoth-sized upgrade — genetic tweaks have given them thick, woolly fur, bringing science one step closer to reviving traits of extinct species.