Text
822 notes
·
View notes
Text
By using antibodies from a human donor with a self-induced hyper-immunity to snake venom, scientists have developed the most broadly effective antivenom to date, which is protective against the likes of the black mamba, king cobra, and tiger snakes in mouse trials. Described in the journal Cell, the antivenom combines protective antibodies and a small molecule inhibitor and opens a path toward a universal antiserum.
Continue Reading.
38K notes
·
View notes
Text
I love scientists. I'm participating in a week-long BioBlitz at [organization] and we all gather 'round at the end of every day for "show-and-tell" of the coolest thing we found. Yesterday one of our experts showed us a bunch of microscope pictures of various blobs and shapes, and every single time, the entire room gasped in awe. Someone breathlessly murmured "gorgeous..." multiple times. The scientist himself had identified each species of blob in multiple wildly different phyla. Every single picture looked like this
182 notes
·
View notes
Text
shark@!!!
i will say more
later
go foloww main @aceofstars0
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
This is confusiong
I had to switch my old account to my school account and I tried logging back in to change it to another email but my administration blocked it so I guess I cant get in even if I wanted to 😃
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
Nevermind?
I had to switch my old account to my school account and I tried logging back in to change it to another email but my administration blocked it so I guess I cant get in even if I wanted to 😃
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
I had to switch my old account to my school account and I tried logging back in to change it to another email but my administration blocked it so I guess I cant get in even if I wanted to 😃
4 notes
·
View notes