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In just the last several months, de-extinction — bringing back extinct species by recreating them or organisms that resemble ...
But many scientists are sceptical of the ethics behind such costly “de-extinction” efforts. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Declared extinct decades ago, the Tasmanian tiger - or thylacine - still sparks rumors, sightings, and debates. In this video ...
The South Island giant moa could be the next species that biotech company Colossal Biosciences "brings back" from extinction ...
Colossal Biosciences, together with Maori partners, has revealed intentions to functionally bring back the moa – a massive, flightless bird that disappeared within 150 years after humans arrived in ...
A plan to revive the extinct Moa has sparked debate - and excitement - among experts. US company Colossal Bioscience has partnered with Ngai Tahu in a $50 million project to revive the flightless bird ...
A species of huge, flightless bird that once inhabited New Zealand disappeared around 600 years ago, shortly after human ...
In April, the Dallas-based biotech company Colossal Biosciences announced that it had successfully brought back the dire wolf ...
H umans once lived among enormous, wingless birds in New Zealand, but within a few hundred years of our species arrival, they ...
In just the last several months, de-extinction—bringing back extinct species by recreating them or organisms that resemble ...
His latest film, Hunt for Truth: Tasmanian Tiger Verdict claims to have found new evidence to support claims the thylacine was still alive in the 1980s.