Genotyping could answer a centuries-old mystery about a vanished group of British settlers.
Genotyping could answer a centuries-old mystery about a vanished group of British settlers.
For the first time, researchers culture a bacteria that uses a magnetic sulfide compound to navigate.
The Japanese Prime Minister brings a measure of closure to the accidents at the crippled nuclear power plant.
Researchers use whole-genome sequencing to keep tabs on the development of antibiotic resistance in bacteria.
A Presidential Commission suggests improvements to the US system for tracking federally funded research projects involving human subjects.
19th century shipping records defy the claim that Charles Darwin stole some of Alfred Russel Wallace's ideas to craft his theory of evolution.
The need for ancient humans to keep cool during the day might explain their lack of body hair but not why they walked on two feet.
Gene expression controlled from afar may have spurred the spurt in brain evolution that led to modern humans.
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in ecology, from Faculty of 1000