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Rather than resurrect extinct species, cloning technology could save those at risk of dying out, like the red wolf, but only ...
DENVER (KDVR) — Colorado’s range riders, a group that will monitor wolf and livestock conflicts, are ready and gearing up to help with wolf mitigation across the state. Now, the range riders ...
The dire wolf went extinct around 10,000 years ago. The recent claim that a U.S. biotechnology company resurrected the long-extinct dire wolf through genetic engineering seemed to shock the ...
The Timber Wolf, the first wooden roller coaster at Worlds of Fun that opened in 1989, will be closed for the 2025 season, the theme park’s website says. Chad Showalter, Worlds of Fun’s ...
Ben Lamm is the de-extinction entrepreneur who says he has brought back the dire wolf, a species that died out more than 10,000 years ago. On Joe Rogan's podcast to explain the process ...
Colossal Biosciences has successfully bred three dire wolf pups, named Remus, Romulus, and Khaleesi, using ancient DNA, cloning, and gene-editing technology. This groundbreaking achievement marks ...
The answer, according to the Texas-based Colossal Biosciences, is a six-month-old dire wolf, a canine species that has been extinct for more than 12,000 years. But scientists have a different name ...
One of the biggest headlines of the week: A Texas-based genetics company claims to have brought the dire wolf back from extinction — or, essentially, from the dead. Earlier this week ...
This dire wolf pup is among the first of its species born in around 10,000 years. Colossal Biosciences Colossal also said it had cloned four red wolves, a critically endangered animal with under ...
When we heard scientists had literally brought back the Dire Wolf from extinction, we thought, "Who would the Miami Dolphins bring back?" The question seemed absurd until hundreds and hundreds of ...
Romulus and Remus nod to the legendary founders of Rome, raised by a wolf, while Khaleesi evokes the dire wolves of Game of Thrones. It's a resurrection story made for the headlines, but beneath ...