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Ever since the nuclear disaster of 1986, the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone has taken on a second life as an animal haven of sorts.
To make horses rideable during domestication, people may have inadvertently targeted a mutation in horses to strengthen their backs and their balance.
America’s wild horses have faced competition from livestock, unfair resource allocation, and shrinking habitat for ...
Techno-Science.net on MSN
🐎 How slight mutations transformed the wild horse into a faithful companion
The domestication of the horse marked a major turning point in human history, paving the way for spectacular advances in transportation, conflict, and agriculture. This unique relationship ...
Horses with genomic edits to make them run faster have been banned from polo, but a zoo of CRISPR-edited animals is gaining ...
Live Science on MSN
How the mystery origins of hairy little Yakutian horses were uncovered in Siberia's 'gateway to the underworld'
In 2018, a perfectly-preserved foal was pulled from the permafrost in Siberia. It's discovery, along with another horse from ...
Argentinian scientists have unveiled the world’s first-ever genetically modified horses that can run faster and have bigger muscles.The 10-month-old foals that look like ordinary horses ...
This collection of stories highlights the longstanding debate surrounding horseback rides in Palma Sola Bay and their impact ...
adding fuel to a long-standing debate that horses contaminate the waterway. Scientists with the Sarasota Bay Estuary Program and Suncoast Waterkeeper recently began the advanced sampling to pinpoint ...
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