News

Curators at Moyse’s Hall Museum (located in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk) just found an anthropodermic book hidden on an office ...
A book bound in the skin of one of the UK's most notorious murderers is to go on display after being found in a museum's ...
Growing cells in the laboratory is an art that humans have mastered decades ago. Recreating entire three-dimensional tissues is much more challenging. Researchers are developing a new hydrogel-based ...
The skin is the largest organ in the human body. It makes up about 15% of our body weight and protects us from pathogens, ...
Researchers from Graz University of Technology and the Vellore Institute of Technology (VIT) in India are working on what they believe could be a compromise—offering the reliability of animal testing ...
Engineered skin imitations containing living human cells have shown promising results in early testing, which paves the way for eliminating animal use in cosmetic and pharmaceutical testing.
Growing cells in the laboratory is an art that humans have mastered decades ago. Recreating entire three-dimensional tissues is much more challenging.
Researchers create an iontronic artificial skin that senses pressure, temperature, and current while learning patterns ...
Much like hydrogels made from animal gelatin, the resulting material is biologically compatible with human skin cells and can be 3D printed. However, it has a crucial distinguishing feature ...
The book tells the story of the murderer William Corder who was hanged at Bury St Edmunds in 1828 for killing his lover Maria ...