Arabian cheetah mummies' DNA reveals that the long-lost population could be closely replaced by a cheetah population in ...
More than 14,000 years ago, a wolf pup ate a piece of woolly rhino. Scientists have analyzed the rhino's DNA to figure out ...
The work marks the first time an Ice Age animal’s complete genome has been recovered from tissue preserved inside another ...
Scientists prepared a high-quality sequence of the giant mammal’s genome based on a specimen preserved in Siberian permafrost ...
Scientists have uncovered mummified remains of cheetahs from caves in northern Saudi Arabia. The seven mummies range from 130 to over 1,800 years old.
Preserved by dry, cool air and darkness, the cheetah mummies are offering scientists DNA insights into a lost population and ...
Researchers were able to sequence the full genome from the 14,000-year-old chunk of preserved woolly rhinoceros meat.
Hallucigenia was such an odd animal that palaeontologists reconstructed it upside-down when they first analysed its fossils - ...
A 14,400-year-old wolf puppy’s last meal is shedding light on the last days of one of the Ice Age’s most iconic megafauna ...
The sadly now extinct rhino lived on the steppes and tundra of Europe and Asia, living alongside people for thousands of ...
Scientists have sequenced the genome of the long-extinct woolly rhinoceros from remains found in the stomach of a naturally ...