Understanding the causes of stuttering in children has always been a problem for scientists, but recently US scientists have discovered that stuttering is related to genetic
A woman named Julia Pastrana was famous around the world in the mid-18th century thanks to the beard and hair covering her body.
In a cramped, humid laboratory in London, mosquitoes swarming in net-covered cages are being investigated for ways to control malaria.
Researchers have created a mutant worm, which may never get drunk in an attempt to find a cure for alcoholics.
The sheep dog in Mr. Liu Naiying's farm has fur like a sheep, but its mouth, nose, eyes, legs and tail are like a dog.
IAEA provides countries with information and skills to apply nuclear technology to better assess and manage national water resources.
There is a white man who comes to evangelize on a small island in Africa. After a while, the black chieftain's wife gave birth to a white child.
Your genome set is usually 49.99% like everyone else. But there are a few mutations that you can create, or you may be their victims. And gene mutations are often very ominous.
Swedish scientists believe that the amount of carotenoids in the human intestines affects stroke, according to ANI.
When parents give birth, there are about 60 genetic mutations on average in the process of encoding new genes. This number is less than the previous estimate of scientists,