Woolly Mammoth Theatre is celebrating its 45th year and is also marking 20 years in its D Street NW building. It’s hard to imagine something more fitting for Woolly Mammoth Theatre’s stage ...
The following is an edited transcript of their conversation. Nova Safo: So you’re not exactly bringing back the woolly mammoth. You’re creating a new hybrid. Is that right? Ben Lamm ...
A superior incisor belonging to a woolly mammoth, contemporary with Homo sapiens populations, was discovered in a ravine in Romania. The incisor represents the largest piece of paleofauna in the ...
THIS LIFE SIZED WOOLY MAMMOTH INSIDE THE NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY OF MARYLAND REALLY HAS THE WOW FACTOR. Y’ALL DID IT YOURSELF WHEN YOU WALKED IN. IT WAS WOW, YOU THINK YOU KNOW HOW YOU’RE ...
A firm that says it can bring back the woolly mammoth 4,000 years after it vanished from the earth has just completed a $200 million (£160 million) funding round. Colossal Biosciences founder Ben ...
Colossal Biosciences is working to bring back species like the woolly mammoth using CRISPR-Cas9 technology. The project aims to restore lost biodiversity and combat climate change by creating cold ...
“But tomorrow it’ll be causing economic effects.” Perhaps known best for its efforts to bring back the woolly mammoth, Dallas-based Colossal’s core mission is preserving biodiversity ...
Their approach isn’t about cloning but rewriting DNA to create a mammoth hybrid—a mix of the modern Asian elephant and woolly mammoth traits. Think of it as bringing back the mammoth’s ...
A startup company is trying to raise money to bring back the woolly mammoth. Colossal Biosciences Inc. uses DNA and genomics in hopes of re-introducing extinct animals to the modern-day world.
The woolly mammoth, a giant that roamed the icy expanses of the planet during the Pleistocene epoch, became extinct around 4,000 years ago and is at the center of Colossal’s mission. It’s a ...
Hunting a woolly mammoth may have had a high reward, but ancient people in central Europe likely went after other animals first. “If we could see the animals they hunted, we might be surprised.