Scientists are hopeful it will improve understanding of how genes work, what goes wrong in disease, and how to fix it.
The newly-discovered species is being called the “death-ball sponge” for its appendages, which end in orbs and are covered in micro-hooks meant to capture prey.
UTA’s Ananya Singh explores how artificial intelligence challenges originality and raises questions of artistic ownership ...
The e Vitara marks an important milestone for the brand – its Suzuki’s first fully electric model. On paper, it looks like ...
Ancient snakes once possessed four limbs, but evolution dramatically reshaped them. A genetic 'switch' called the ZRS ...
Although heart cells and skin cells contain identical instructions for creating proteins encoded in their DNA, they're able ...
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine alumnus and former faculty member Hamilton O. Smith, M.D., whose 1978 Nobel Prize-winning discovery of restriction enzymes revolutionized genetic ...
Everything is the West’s fault. Misogyny? Western export. Human rights? Clearly a Western invention. According to Western ...
A recently published study suggests humans' creative inclinations go back much further than previously thought ...
In 1895, Wilhelm Röntgen's accidental discovery of X-rays marked the moment science learned to look beyond surfaces, fusing ...
The Boilermakers are No. 1 in the rankings and have their best shot at a national championship since Matt Painter made a ...
The Pearl Fryar Topiary Garden is located at 145 Broad Acres Road in Bishopville, South Carolina. It’s typically open Tuesday through Saturday, though hours can vary seasonally. There’s no admission ...