For several months in 1898, a pair of male lions turned the Tsavo region of Kenya into their own human hunting grounds, ...
Research on Tsavo lion museum specimens from the 1890s, using DNA isolated from hairs in their teeth, reveals a diverse diet ...
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) -- The Louisville Zoo's baby giraffe was named "Nyasi" after a public vote earlier this month. Over the course of two weeks, nearly 4,000 votes were cast from people ...
By isolating and sequencing DNA in compacted hairs collected from the teeth of two Tsavo lion museum specimens from the 1890s ...
In 1898, two male lions terrorized an encampment of bridge builders on the Tsavo River in Kenya. The lions, which were ...
Researchers analyzed DNA from hairs in the teeth of the infamous Tsavo man-eating lions, revealing that they consumed a ...
The Tsavo “man-eaters” became infamous after killing at least 28 people in 1898 when they terrorized people in Kenya.
Genetic analysis of cavity crud from two famed man-eating lions suggests the method could re-create diets of predators that lived thousands of years ago.
Hairs trapped in cavities of the infamous lions that hunted humans in Kenya’s Tsavo region in 1898 revealed the surprising ...
Two lions became infamous for terrorizing and eating humans in 1898 during the construction of a railway bridge. Now, a ...
Scientists analyzed hairs extracted from the broken teeth of two 19th century 'man-eater' lions. Their analysis revealed DNA from giraffe, human, oryx, waterbuck, wildebeest and zebra as prey, along ...
But there’s more to the okapi’s story than meets the eye. The okapi, known as the “forest giraffe,” is the only living relative of the giraffe, although it resembles a cross between a deer and a zebra ...