Experimental browser for the Atmosphere
Loading post...
{ "uri": "at://did:plc:o2qhsenmplu5ynlen7ie34be/app.bsky.feed.like/3lonxkbaftb2e", "cid": "bafyreih4bo7jwob4b6ygc4fn5jzabrjxzvwgm6udq56kcye4oxizanopuy", "value": { "$type": "app.bsky.feed.like", "subject": { "cid": "bafyreib7wcee7czqqgzp3vjxirnclkjyee73gjme6b3brkvvuqewmkrtjy", "uri": "at://did:plc:r643qxafn6b3pxfffiodojbn/app.bsky.feed.post/3lomizrl6rs2r" }, "createdAt": "2025-05-08T12:56:22.810Z" } }
The quest to make darker petunias led to a 2006 Nobel & a fundamental tool of modern molecular biology. In 1986, Richard Jorgensen was trying to make a darker purple petunia to get some VC funding. So he inserted additional copies of the pigment gene into petunias. Instead, they turned WHITE.
May 7, 2025, 11:03 PM