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The de-extinction of the dire wolf began with a tooth from Ohio. According to CrisPR, the tooth from Sheridan Pit in northwestern Ohio was one of two pieces of dire wolf fossils Colossal ...
To make the pups, scientists extracted DNA from two prehistoric dire wolf fossils: a 13,000-year-old tooth discovered in Sheridan Pit, Ohio ... expansive ecological preserves potentially on ...
Colossal said it extracted DNA from two dire wolf fossils: a tooth from Sheridan Pit, Ohio, that is around 13,000 ... in secure and expansive ecological preserves, potentially on indigenous ...
The ancient DNA was extracted from two dire wolf fossils: a tooth from Sheridan Pit, Ohio, that is around 13,000 ... in secure and expansive ecological preserves, potentially on indigenous land.
Colossal scientists extracted ancient DNA from two dire wolf fossils: a tooth from Sheridan Pit, Ohio, about 13,000 years old, and an inner-ear bone from American Falls, Idaho, roughly 72,000 ...
Colossal said it extracted DNA from two dire wolf fossils: a tooth from Sheridan Pit, Ohio, that is around 13,000 ... in secure and expansive ecological preserves, potentially on indigenous ...