Discover how axolotls and flatworms coordinate regeneration through body-wide signals, revealing a complex healing process.
Axolotls and flatworms regenerate lost body parts through body-wide coordination, not local repair. Scientists analysed that ...
Injuries are a part of life. When humans get hurt, our wounds heal, but scars remain and lost body parts never return. In the ...
Scientists at Children's Medical Center Research Institute at UT Southwestern (CRI) have discovered a benefit of vitamin C ...
A research team has recreated the evolution of the eye in a physics simulation. The results show why nature chose such ...
A series of compounds that deprive iron essential for a parasitic worm could provide effective new agents for blocking ...
A mystery that started with the discovery of a pinkie finger bone in Denisova Cave in the Altai Mountains of southern Siberia may finally have been cracked.
Humans are far more monogamous than our primate cousins, but less so than beavers, a new study suggests. Researchers from the University of Cambridge in England analyzed the proportion of full ...
Humans are far closer to meerkats and beavers for levels of exclusive mating than we are to most of our primate cousins, according to a new University of Cambridge study that includes a table ranking ...
Something about a warm, flickering campfire draws in modern humans. Where did that uniquely human impulse come from? How did our ancestors learn to make fire? How long have they been making it?
The fundamental nature of living things challenges assumptions that physicists have held for centuries.
Also in Goodful: "I’m Sitting There With My Jaw On The Floor": Guys Are Sharing The Minor Things Women Say, Do, Or Wear That ...