News

Data from the largest retrospective analysis of ENPP1 Deficiency provides insights into the evolution of the disease’s ...
In the 1970s, archaeologists discovered a strange grave in western Belgium, dating back to 100 CE or so. Unlike the 76 other graves, it actually had a skeleton inside it. But 50 years la ...
A Texas-based biotechnology company announced on Monday that it has successfully revived the long-extinct dire wolf, marking ...
Colossal Biosciences—the company whose mission is “de-extinction”—has pulled off one of the wildest feats in modern science: ...
A 220-year-old forensic mystery has just been cracked wide open. New scientific tests reveal a shocking truth about one of ...
The next time you visit the Red Cliffs Mall in St. George, you may come across something unique: A giant, 3D-printed T. rex skeleton. The skeleton, created by ...
It's no coincidence that our bodies feel a little creakier as we age. The trillions of cells that make up our skeleton age too, and some change in ...
Archaeologists can detect rickets in human remains because the disease “impairs the mineralization of newly formed bone and can lead to skeletal deformities,” which can be observed centuries later.
Governments like to boast that "data-driven" policies are the best way to make fair, efficient decisions. They collect ...