Ancient DNA shows forests grew on the lost land of Doggerland 16,000 years ago, suggesting it supported wildlife.
DNA evidence on the back door and the victim’s clothing led detectives to Shirley. Shirley spoke to police in January 2026 and allegedly admitted to entering the home and stealing a vape but said his ...
Genetic signatures help uncover the echoes of the past events in the histories of jewelweed populations, and understand their ...
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They found 6 living men who share Leonardo da Vinci’s DNA, now they can prove whose bones are in that French castle
They traced his family back to 1331. Now, six DNA tests could finally confirm whose bones are in Leonardo da Vinci's grave.
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 ...
Mosquitoes haven't always had a taste for human blood — partly because the tiny yet dangerous insects have been around a lot ...
Scientists traced Leonardo da Vinci’s Y chromosome through living relatives, a breakthrough that may confirm his true burial ...
The case dates back to Feb. 1990, when, a man called 911 and reported that he had slipped into a vacant Bedford-Stuyvesant ...
TriHealth is recruiting 100,000 people in the community to take part in a clinical trial aimed at using participants’ DNA to help reduce future health risks.
Ancient DNA preserved in seabed sediments suggests Doggerland hosted temperate forests far earlier than expected.
In ancient Greece, a hole was drilled in the trunks of almond trees into which plugs of pine tree wood were inserted.
Thousands of years before the North Sea flooded the region, a vast landscape known as Doggerland once connected Britain to mainland Europe.
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