News

Endangered species protection is a massive industry, but is it truly about saving wildlife or just another way to generate ...
The idea that extreme heat could one day cause a mass extinction and end the dominance of humans is not as farfetched as it ...
De-extinction entrepreneur Ben Lamm speaks exclusively with Metro.co.uk's Jen Mills.
as part of Colossal’s so-called de-extinction project, which is also working to bring back the woolly mammoth through gene editing. “Our team took DNA from a 13,000-year-old tooth and a 72,000 ...
First, scientists dug up some old bones. Fossils, actually — real direwolf teeth and skulls buried in the earth for 13,000 to 72,000 years. These bones still had tiny fragments of DNA inside ...
Its revival has been called the “world’s first de-extinction”. Announcing the birth of three dire wolves – Romulus, Remus and Khaleesi, Colossal Biosciences said these resurrected wolf ...
Or has it? Colossal Biosciences, the company behind so-called "de-extinction tech," made headlines after appearing on the cover of Time magazine on Monday having claimed to have brought back dire ...
The company says its de-extinction process could help support conservation efforts globally. "Preserving, expanding, and testing genetic diversity should be done well before important endangered ...
The dire wolf has been extinct for over 10,000 years. These two wolves were brought back from extinction using genetic edits derived from a complete dire wolf genome, meticulously reconstructed by ...
AUSTIN (KXAN) — Dire wolves are back from the dead after Dallas-based company, Colossal Biosciences, effectively performed the world’s first de-extinction. The company brought back a species ...
Resources poured into de-extinction could arguably be better spent preserving habitats, restoring degraded ecosystems, and preventing modern extinctions. Colossal’s dire wolf project is not a ...
SCIENTISTS have brought back Dire Wolves from the dead in the world's first-ever de-extinction project. Dire Wolves were large, white-coated canines that disappeared 13,000 years ago - but now ...