Scientists have analyzed coprolytes (fossilized stools) from the early Jomon period, approximately 7,000 to 5,500 years ago. Analysis of DNA remains from the early Jomon period led to information on the intestinal
Scientists have analyzed coprolytes (fossilized stools) from the early Jomon period, approximately 7,000 to 5,500 years ago. Analysis of DNA remains from the early Jomon period led to information on the intestinal
MoreArchaeologists combined DNA analysis with pottery to study the spread of acdar across Eurasia, revealing how regional culinary traditions persisted even as new crops emerged. In China, millet was domesticated and boiled
MoreBitkiler, polen (erkek üreme kısmı) pistilden (dişi üreme kısmı) geçip yumurtalığın içindeki yumurtayı döllediğinde bir meyve oluşturur.
MoreThe discovery of the oldest DNA ever recovered reveals a stunning two-million-year-old environment in Greenland, including the presence of an unexpected explorer: the mastodon. The DNA, discovered in sediments in Peary Land
MoreScientists are still fascinated by the question of how life first evolved on Earth, but it’s difficult to look back billions of years in time. Evidence is now mounting for a relatively
MoreAccording to data gathered by scientists at the Bloomberg Kimmel Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy and the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center, the bacterial species Clostridioides difficile, or C. diff, which is well
MoreToday, there is a language that we know and understand clearly. All the features that make us different from each other are due to DNA, or “deoxyribonucleic acid”. The DNA that makes
MoreDNA could one day be integrated into a computer chip. In fact, DNA molecules have already been used to solve complex mathematical problems. The widespread use of these computers would revolutionize storage
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