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Mice who were created by scientists using the genetics of two biological fathers have gone on to have their own offspring ...
8d
New Scientist on MSNMice with two fathers have their own offspring for the first timeWe're a step closer to two men being able to have genetic children of their own after the creation of fertile mice by putting ...
1d
The Cool Down on MSNScientists make disturbing new discovery after analyzing guts of baby mice: 'Valuable insights'"Providing a foundation for future research." Scientists make disturbing new discovery after analyzing guts of baby mice: ...
3dOpinion
PinkNews on MSN‘Mice with two dads having babies isn’t a gay victory – it’s performative science and animal abuse’As a scientist and a gay dad, I suppose I’m expected to throw my hat in the air, celebrating the news that the offspring of ...
The mystery of a 146,000-year-old skull has been solved — using plaque extracted from a tooth. The skull, nicknamed “Dragon ...
Mice with two fathers have, for the first time, gone on to have babies of their own, showing that mice created with two sperm ...
8dOpinion
New Scientist on MSNHow might society react to babies with two genetic fathers?Mice created using genetic material from two sperm cells have gone on to have offspring off their own, but the prospect of ...
The tech's still in its embryonic stage. Japanese scientists claim they could grown human babies in the lab in as few as five years by incubating eggs and sperm in an artificial womb.
For the first time, scientists have created baby mice from two males. This raises the distant possibility of using the same technique for people – although experts caution that very few mouse ...
The team found that estradiol changed the neurons in a way that made the animal more responsive to the odors and sounds of baby mice. The effect faded, though, as the pups grew up.
Giving antibiotics to young mice is likely to make them more aggressive in later life, according to a new study. Researchers at Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan, central Israel, believe their findings ...
Are mice clever enough to be strategic? Kishore Kuchibhotla, a Johns Hopkins University neuroscientist who studies learning in humans and animals, and who has long worked with mice, wondered why ...
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