Science
Man and dog: New genetics study reveals complex history – Bangkok Post
WASHINGTON: Much of the diversity seen in modern dog populations was already present around the time the last Ice Age had ended 11,000 years ago, a global study…

WASHINGTON: Much of the diversity seen in modern dog populations was already present around the time the last Ice Age had ended 11,000 years ago, a global study of ancient DNA revealed Thursday.
The paper, published in Science, showed how our canine companions spread across the world with their masters, but also found intriguing periods when our shared history was decoupled.
A research team led by the Francis Crick Institute sequenced the genomes of 27 dogs, some of which lived nearly 11,000 years…
-
Noosa News8 hours ago
How Lily Steele-Park took her rapist to court and won
-
General22 hours ago
‘Potential’ hacker contacts Qantas over data breach
-
Business13 hours ago
Ford CEO makes stunning prediction about artificial intelligence
-
General24 hours ago
Fears for next anti-Semitic firebombing on home soil