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  • NEWS - Olympischer Fackellauf für Tokio 2020 in der Präfektur Wakayama
    DUK10141879_007
    NEWS - Olympischer Fackellauf für Tokio 2020 in der Präfektur Wakayama
    A local torchbearer runs during the Tokyo 2020 Olympic torch relay in Koya Town, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan on April 10, 2021. (Photo by Takahiro Sanda/AFLO)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Olympischer Fackellauf für Tokio 2020 in der Präfektur Wakayama
    DUK10141879_002
    NEWS - Olympischer Fackellauf für Tokio 2020 in der Präfektur Wakayama
    Local torchbearers pass the Olympic flame during the Tokyo 2020 Olympic torch relay in Koya Town, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan on April 10, 2021. (Photo by Takahiro Sanda/AFLO)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    DUKAS_08955554_WPN
    Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    Teruhiko Wakayama, head scientist in the Laboratory of Genomic Reprogramming, working at his desk in the Riken Kobe Institute Center for Developmental Biology, in Kobe, Japan, Thursday, Nov. 13th, 2008. Dr. Wakayama has published a scientific paper explaining his process of cloning mice whose bodies had been frozen for as long as 16 years, he says it may be possible to use this technique to resurrect mammoths and other extinct species working from traces of their frozen DNA.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)

    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    DUKAS_08955386_WPN
    Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    Teruhiko Wakayama, head scientist in the Laboratory of Genomic Reprogramming, working at his desk in the Riken Kobe Institute Center for Developmental Biology, in Kobe, Japan, Thursday, Nov. 13th, 2008. Dr. Wakayama has published a scientific paper explaining his process of cloning mice whose bodies had been frozen for as long as 16 years, he says it may be possible to use this technique to resurrect mammoths and other extinct species working from traces of their frozen DNA.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)

    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    DUKAS_08955381_WPN
    Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    Teruhiko Wakayama, head scientist in the Laboratory of Genomic Reprogramming, working at his desk in the Riken Kobe Institute Center for Developmental Biology, in Kobe, Japan, Thursday, Nov. 13th, 2008. Dr. Wakayama has published a scientific paper explaining his process of cloning mice whose bodies had been frozen for as long as 16 years, he says it may be possible to use this technique to resurrect mammoths and other extinct species working from traces of their frozen DNA.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)

    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    DUKAS_08955304_WPN
    Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    Teruhiko Wakayama, head scientist in the Laboratory of Genomic Reprogramming, holding a frozen mouse, in the Riken Kobe Institute Center for Developmental Biology, in Kobe, Japan, Thursday, Nov. 13th, 2008. Dr. Wakayama has published a scientific paper explaining his process of cloning mice whose bodies had been frozen for as long as 16 years, he says it may be possible to use this technique to resurrect mammoths and other extinct species working from traces of their frozen DNA.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)

    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    DUKAS_08955202_WPN
    Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    Teruhiko Wakayama, head scientist in the Laboratory of Genomic Reprogramming, holding a frozen mouse, in the Riken Kobe Institute Center for Developmental Biology, in Kobe, Japan, Thursday, Nov. 13th, 2008. Dr. Wakayama has published a scientific paper explaining his process of cloning mice whose bodies had been frozen for as long as 16 years, he says it may be possible to use this technique to resurrect mammoths and other extinct species working from traces of their frozen DNA.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)

    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    DUKAS_08955201_WPN
    Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    Teruhiko Wakayama, head scientist in the Laboratory of Genomic Reprogramming, holding a frozen mouse, in the Riken Kobe Institute Center for Developmental Biology, in Kobe, Japan, Thursday, Nov. 13th, 2008. Dr. Wakayama has published a scientific paper explaining his process of cloning mice whose bodies had been frozen for as long as 16 years, he says it may be possible to use this technique to resurrect mammoths and other extinct species working from traces of their frozen DNA.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)

    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    DUKAS_08955084_WPN
    Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    Teruhiko Wakayama, head scientist in the Laboratory of Genomic Reprogramming, working at his desk in the Riken Kobe Institute Center for Developmental Biology, in Kobe, Japan, Thursday, Nov. 13th, 2008. Dr. Wakayama has published a scientific paper explaining his process of cloning mice whose bodies had been frozen for as long as 16 years, he says it may be possible to use this technique to resurrect mammoths and other extinct species working from traces of their frozen DNA.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)

    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    DUKAS_08954722_WPN
    Japan Scientist Clones Frozen Animals
    Teruhiko Wakayama, head scientist in the Laboratory of Genomic Reprogramming, in the Riken Kobe Institute Center for Developmental Biology, in Kobe, Japan, Thursday, Nov. 13th, 2008. Dr. Wakayama has published a scientific paper explaining his process of cloning mice whose bodies had been frozen for as long as 16 years, he says it may be possible to use this technique to resurrect mammoths and other extinct species working from traces of their frozen DNA.
    (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)

    DUKAS/WPN