Morning Overview on MSN
Blood cell differences may have doomed Neanderthals
Recent research on human evolution suggests that the extinction of our Neanderthal cousins may have been hastened by ...
A study led by UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center investigators reveals how melanoma, the deadliest form of skin ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Study reveals how melanoma evolves to resist immunotherapy
A study led by UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center investigators reveals how melanoma, the deadliest form of skin ...
The next time you go wild swimming, whether in a lake, river or sea, you are probably sharing the water with one of your ...
In the beginning, when planets were newborn, they glowed like furnaces, vast oceans of molten rock wrapped in heavy blankets ...
In a suspected case of reverse evolution, wild tomatoes in the Galápagos have developed a defense mechanism that hasn’t been seen in millions of years.
Live Science on MSN
Neanderthals were more susceptible to lead poisoning than humans — which helped us gain an advantage over our cousins, scientists say
Humans and our ancestors have been exposed to lead for 2 million years, but the toxic metal may have actually helped our ...
Can sea slugs form abstract thoughts? Do we dare to see any "purpose" in evolution? Is the subjective just a complicated form ...
In his debut book, the evolutionary biologist decodes the most exciting turning points in the effort to map what links all ...
The team hypothesizes that the snakes have enzymes that convert the deadly substances into nontoxic forms, much as human ...
Critters consuming species that harbor deadly toxins have evolved a suite of clever strategies to keep out of harm’s way.
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