Dec. 03, 2018News
Leading scientists call for action to increase global soil carbon, in advance of the annual climate summit of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Katowice, Poland (COP24) and World Soil Day (5 Dec). ...
Sep. 28, 2018News
From October 1, 2018, until January 15, 2019, young researchers not older than 35 years, with an advanced degree, who are working in Europe can apply for the Eppendorf Award for Young European Investigators. This highly prestigious 20,000 ...
Mar. 22, 2017News
More than a century of theory about the evolutionary history of dinosaurs has been turned on its head following the publication of new research from scientists at the University of Cambridge and Natural History Museum in London. Their work ...
Jun. 08, 2016News
Prof. Adrian Liston (36) Group leader at VIB Translational Immunology Lab, University of Leuven, Belgium was honored as the 21st winner of the Eppendorf Award for Young European Investigators. ...
Aug. 19, 2015News
Much in the same way as we use shredders to destroy documents that are no longer useful or that contain potentially damaging information, cells use molecular machines to degrade unwanted or defective macromolecules. Scientists of the Max ...
Aug. 12, 2015News
Researchers unveil new details about how cells in a living being process stimuli. The study, partly funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation SNSF, focuses on so-called G-proteins, which help transmit external stimuli that reach a ...
Apr. 20, 2015News
Thomas Wollert receives the Eppendorf Award for Young European Investigators 2015. With the Eppendorf Young Investigator Award, the Company Eppendorf honors outstanding work in biomedical research in collaboration with the scientific ...
Apr. 07, 2015News
Stem Cell Research: Inside the microscopic world of the mouse hair follicle, Yale Cancer Center researchers have discovered big clues about how stem cells regenerate and die. These findings, published in the journal Nature, could lead to a ...
Nov. 07, 2014News
Researchers from the University of Cambridge have identified a class of low-cost, easily-processed semiconducting polymers which, despite their seemingly disorganised internal structure, can transport electrons as efficiently as expensive ...
Nov. 04, 2014News
New process transforms wood, crop waste into valuable chemicals.
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