Rhinoceros poaching is an enormous problem worldwide, with an estimated 7,245 African rhinos lost to poachers over the last decade alone. We’ve previously covered high tech solutions to the poaching ...
How do you solve a problem like rhino poaching? There’s former Australian soldier Damien Mander, who fights illegal poachers with guns. There’s a project aiming to airlift rhinos out of the poaching ...
Rhinoceros continue to be murdered for their horns, coveted by people in different parts of the world as pieces of art, handles for weapons, and most frequently for medicinal and homeopathic purposes ...
File photo of a rhino seen after it was dehorned in an effort to deter the poaching of one of the world’s endangered species, at a farm outside Klerksdorp, South Africa. The illegal wildlife trade is ...
Approximately one month ago, poachers surreptitiously killed a young white rhino named Vince, who was living at the Thoiry Zoo on the outskirts of Paris. They did this so they could saw off Vince's ...
There’s a startup called Pembient that is 3D printing rhinoceros horns in a lab on the far edge of San Francisco. These are not horns that look like rhino horns. These are genetically identical rhino ...
Fast-forward a decade, and the world of 3D printing has evolved tremendously. Printers are faster, smarter, and more refined.
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