AFP – Scientists investigating how Antarctica’s ice sheets retreated in the deep past have turned to an innovative approach: studying the genes of octopuses that live in its chilly waters. A new analysis published in Science finds that geographically-isolated populations of the eight-limbed sea creatures mated freely around 125,000 years ago, signaling an ice-free corridor […]
Scientists investigating how Antarctica's ice sheets retreated in the deep past have turned to an innovative approach: studying the genes of octopuses that live in its chilly waters. A new analysis published in Science finds that geographically-isolated populations of the eight-limbed sea creatures mated freely around 125,000 years ago, signaling…
Scientists investigating how Antarctica's ice sheets retreated in the deep past have turned to an innovative approach: studying the genes of octopuses that live in its chilly waters.
WASHINGTON: Scientists investigating how Antarctica's ice sheets retreated in the deep past have turned to an innovative approach: Studying the genes of octopuses that live in its chilly waters. A new analysis published on Thursday (Dec 21) in Science finds that geographically isolated populations of the e
Scientists investigating how Antarctica s ice sheets retreated in the deep past have turned to an innovative approach: studying the genes of octopuses that live in its chilly waters.