Friday, July 3
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Topic: reproductive-biology

A scientist examines a sample under a microscope (file photograph)
New Science
Friday, 7/3, 08:34 PM

A 70-year-old rule said women cannot make new eggs. Some scientists now doubt it

  • For 70 years, biology textbooks have taught that female mammals are born with all the eggs they will ever have, a fixed supply that only dwindles with age.
  • A line of research stretching back two decades now challenges that dogma, arguing that adult ovaries may harbor cells capable of making new eggs.
  • The idea remains contested — but if it holds, it could reshape how we think about fertility and aging.

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