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Could a legendary tomb curse become a medical miracle? Scientists may have reengineered Aspergillus flavus, linked to King ...
A fungus that is thought to have claimed the lives of several excavators working on King Tutankhamun's burial site has had a ...
The same deadly fungus is now being looked at as a potential cancer treatment. The therapy detailed in this new study is a ...
In November 1922, archaeologist Howard Carter peered through a small hole into the sealed tomb of King Tutankhamun. When ...
The toxic fungus Aspergillus flavus— known as the “Pharaoh’s Curse” due to its role in the deaths of archaeologists who ...
A TOXIC fungus linked to the deaths of researchers who opened King Tutankhamun’s tomb may help fight cancer. The poisonous ...
Associated with the infamous King Tut's curse, a deadly spore may now be turned into a potent leukemia treatment.
When people died after entering the ancient pyramids for the first time it was blamed on a Pharaoh's Curse or Mummy's Revenge ...
The new study, funded in part by the National Institutes of Health and published June 18 in Cell Chemical Biology, showed ...
Investigation reveals cancer drugs failing quality tests worldwide, including cisplatin, oxaliplatin, cyclophosphamide, ...