In real life, the dodo lost. After the Dutch settled its home, the island of Mauritius, in the 17th century, it took less then three decades for the bird, which laid only one egg a year ...
Could we walk among the woolly mammoth once again? Scientists are working on just that, and it could happen quite soon. Colossal Biosciences, a biotech company who wants to make seeing the ...
The dodo, a flightless bird native to Mauritius, went extinct in the late 1600s due to overhunting and habitat destruction. Reviving it could serve as a case study in restoring island ecosystems ...
The research relates to one of the more controversial ideas in psychotherapy research – the Dodo bird conjecture. Named after a bird in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland which sent several characters ...
The dodo was a flightless bird that lived on the island nation of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. It is a case study of extinction caused by humans. The dodo had adapted to its isolated ecosystem ...
Colossal is a firm focused on bioscience and the de-extinction of species like the woolly mammoth and dodo bird.
the engineered species could look and act like the real thing. This may sound like science fiction, but the technology is on our doorstep. The process all starts in a lab where scientists have been ...
A rare fragment of a Dodo femur bone is displayed for photographs next to an image of a member of the extinct bird species at Christie's auction house's premises in London, March 27, 2013.