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Could a legendary tomb curse become a medical miracle? Scientists may have reengineered Aspergillus flavus, linked to King ...
Even in their natural state, some asperigimycins killed leukemia cells in lab tests. But the researchers went further. By ...
The same deadly fungus is now being looked at as a potential cancer treatment. The therapy detailed in this new study is a ...
Near the cliffs of Luxor, where ancient temples rise from the desert, a new discovery is changing how we understand one of ...
A fatal fungus once thought to be a curse could potentially help fight disease. Scientists discovered molecules in a fungus ...
The toxic fungus Aspergillus flavus— known as the “Pharaoh’s Curse” due to its role in the deaths of archaeologists who ...
These results show that many more medicines derived from natural products remain to be found,” one professor said.
In the 1920s, archaeologists excavating the necropolis of Deir el-Bahri near Luxor, Egypt, found many broken statues of the ...
Over the past 100 years, historians were left puzzled over one of ancient Egypt ’s most powerful and fascinating rulers' ...
Leadership is not always linear. And Divine Providence rarely unfolds in straight lines. Imagine if you had lived in Egypt in ...
Because, like Pharaoh, he is not responding to reality—he is defending a myth. A vision of himself as divinely ordained, ...
Although many statues of Hatshepsut were intentionally broken, the reason behind their destruction has nothing to do with her ...