In 1985, teenage boys made a chilling discovery in the Wolf River: a human skull. The remains would become known as “Wolf River Joanne Doe,” launching a cold case investigation.
In 1963, researchers unearthed two Stone Age skeletons that were buried in an embraced position in a cave in Italy. Now, DNA ...
Global experts are gathering in Huntsville this week to discuss the latest developments in artificial intelligence at the ...
Using single-cell epigenomic profiling of immune cells from 110 individuals, researchers show that genetic variation and ...
New research shows that the gene PTPN2 helps regulate gut bacteria and plays a key role in protecting the body from excessive inflammation. Scientists at the, Riverside, are uncovering how a single ge ...
Once disregarded as “junk DNA,” scientists now know that this molecular dark matter is crucial for determining gene activity ...
Abigail Morris first visited the Peruvian Amazon when she was 6 years old. Now, as a Ph.D. candidate in the Animal Behavior ...
Oceana scientist Caitlynn Birch explains how environmental DNA, or eDNA, helps us understand and protect the oceans ...
No matter how much they brush their teeth, some people still get more cavities than others, in part because of differences in ...
Trying to connect the 100-plus bones and skeletal remains authorities recovered at an Ephrata man’s home and storage shed ...
The researchers took a “safety-first” approach. They deliberately excluded all viruses that infect humans or animals from the ...
The contents of an ancient wolf pup's stomach yields surprising clues into the genetic lineage of extinct species.
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