Patterson kept the lions' remains, eventually selling them to the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago in 1925. Decades ...
The human body is remarkable in its ability to repair and regenerate damaged tissues. Whether it's a cut on the skin or a ...
The Tsavo “man-eaters” became infamous after killing at least 28 people in 1898 when they terrorized people in Kenya. The ...
From this technique analyzing the hair’s DNA, the team identified giraffe, human, oryx, waterbuck, wildebeest and zebra as ...
After years of promising results in animal studies with mice and ferrets, a groundbreaking drug on the scene could ...
Ancient DNA confirms that the nineteenth-century carnivores hunted humans and a variety of wild game, including a surprising ...
Imagine a world where you could regenerate a missing tooth with a single drug, and microrobots clean your teeth every night.
Hairs trapped in cavities of the infamous lions that hunted humans in Kenya’s Tsavo region in 1898 revealed the surprising ...
Scientists analyzed hairs extracted from the broken teeth of two 19th century “man-eater” lions. Their analysis revealed DNA ...
Research on Tsavo lion museum specimens from the 1890s, using DNA isolated from hairs in their teeth, reveals a diverse diet ...
The Tsavo man-eaters terrorized railroad workers in British East Africa in the 19th century, but their tastes went well ...
For instance, transforming Asean from its roots from a non-interventionist cohort aimed at maintaining peace to one which can ...