Ancient DNA shows forests grew on the lost land of Doggerland 16,000 years ago, suggesting it supported wildlife.
The findings further hint that space rocks may have brought the building blocks of RNA and DNA to Earth long ago ...
For decades, large portions of the human genome were labeled "junk DNA." New research from Western University and London ...
New research shows that hidden regions of the genome once dismissed as "junk DNA" may trigger immune responses that protect against colorectal cancer.
A landmass that once connected Britain to mainland Europe had temperate forests that could have sustained Stone Age people ...
On the flipside, if telomeres are too long, it can also spell trouble because cancer cells require long telomeres to become ...
RNA vaccines saved millions of lives during COVID-19 but have limitations like waning immunity and complex production. Scientists are now testing a new platform called DoriVac, which uses folded DNA ...
Ancient DNA shows forests grew on the lost land of Doggerland 16,000 years ago, suggesting it supported wildlife.
Using cutting-edge ancient DNA analysis, scientists have found evidence of trees like oak, elm, and hazel growing on this now-submerged landscape over 16,000 years ago, thousands of years earlier than ...
Ancient DNA preserved in seabed sediments suggests Doggerland hosted temperate forests far earlier than expected.
Credit: Zde, Wikimedia Commons, Public Domain Ancient DNA is helping scientists understand the origins of Bronze Age ...
Abstract: Micropattern cultures have been used to analyze early differentiation process of human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs), because the differentiated cells form segregated, sorted and ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results