News

but in the case of Australia's thylacine, also known as the Tasmanian tiger, it was down to simple human intervention. The animal, which could reach 6 feet long, tail included, was not a tiger at ...
Thanks to recent advances in genetics, namely the advent of gene editing technology Crispr-Cas9, the thylacine is not the only lost species that we could soon see again. How does the science of de ...
The tiger, also known as Thylacine, was a wolf-like carnivorous marsupial, about the size of a large dog, who once used to roam the forests of Australia, New Guinea and Tasmania. However ...