Penn State's mammoth research to be included on '60 Minutes'
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Credit: S.C. Schuster. Complete mammoth skeleton at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History
New Research into the Mechanisms of Gene Regulation
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The team of scientists used red blood cells from a mouse to study the mechanisms of gene regulation. The research is expected to help in the development of new therapies to treat people who suffer from sickle-cell anemia and other blood disorders. Credit: Wikipedia Commons (Public Domain)
New Insights Into the Smell of Death Could Help Recover Bodies in Disasters and Solve Crimes
Melissa Rolls Honored as Pew Scholar in the Biomedical Sciences
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Melissa Rolls to Receive the 2011 Junior Career Recognition Award from the American Society for Cell Biology
Mobile DNA Elements in Woolly Mammoth Genome Give New Clues to Mammalian Evolution
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Drawing of a woolly mammoth
Scientists Determine the Structure of Highly Efficient Light-Harvesting Molecules in Green Bacteria
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The image shows a hot spring in Yellowstone National Park Montana, a site where bacteria containing chlorosomes can be found in the brightly colored mats. Credit: Donald Bryant, Penn State
A Pair of Penn State Scientists is Named Among TIME Magazine's Top 100 Most Influential People
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Penn State University genomicists Webb Miller and Stephan C. Schuster, in front of the Roche / 454 Life Sciences' Genome Sequencer 20 System that was used to sequence mammoth mitochondrial DNA from the hair of 10 woolly mammoths. Credit: Lynn Tomsho, Penn State
Researchers are Finalists for Time's 'Top 100 Most Influential' List
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Penn State University genomicists Webb Miller and Stephan C. Schuster, in front of the Roche / 454 Life Sciences' Genome Sequencer 20 System that was used to sequence mammoth mitochondrial DNA from the hair of 10 woolly mammoths. Credit: Lynn Tomsho, Penn State
Bollinger Wins Faculty Scholar Medal for Outstanding Research
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Bollinger Honored with Palmer Faculty Mentoring Award
Hair of Tasmanian Tiger Yields Genes of Extinct Species
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Thylacinus in Washington D.C. National Zoo, c. 1906.  Source: Photograph by E.J. Keller, from the Smithsonian Institution archives (via Wikipedia)
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