Difference between revisions of "Timeline of Ectogenesis"

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(== See also == * [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ectogenesis Ectogenesis — Wikipedia])
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The Wikipedia article was created on 2015-07-01. It received a total of 62,828 views, for a daily average of 37. As of 2020-02-22, it is watched by 31 accounts. It received particularly a lot of views on July 2016, with 3,902 views. On May 30-31 2019, it received 12 times as much views than the days around it, possibly due to the article [https://metro.co.uk/2019/05/14/human-babies-born-using-an-artificial-womb-possible-in-a-decade-8156458/ Human babies born using an artificial womb ‘possible in a decade’] published on Metro.co.uk on May 14th.
 
The Wikipedia article was created on 2015-07-01. It received a total of 62,828 views, for a daily average of 37. As of 2020-02-22, it is watched by 31 accounts. It received particularly a lot of views on July 2016, with 3,902 views. On May 30-31 2019, it received 12 times as much views than the days around it, possibly due to the article [https://metro.co.uk/2019/05/14/human-babies-born-using-an-artificial-womb-possible-in-a-decade-8156458/ Human babies born using an artificial womb ‘possible in a decade’] published on Metro.co.uk on May 14th.
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== See also ==
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* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ectogenesis Ectogenesis — Wikipedia]

Revision as of 11:26, 22 February 2020

Ectogenesis is the growth of an organism in an artificial environment. The term is notably used to describe human gestation in artificial wombs.


Popularity

See Google Trends.

The Wikipedia article was created on 2015-07-01. It received a total of 62,828 views, for a daily average of 37. As of 2020-02-22, it is watched by 31 accounts. It received particularly a lot of views on July 2016, with 3,902 views. On May 30-31 2019, it received 12 times as much views than the days around it, possibly due to the article Human babies born using an artificial womb ‘possible in a decade’ published on Metro.co.uk on May 14th.

See also