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Chemistry World March 9, 2009 Lewis Brindley |
Finding the Risks of Nanoparticle Exposure A new model for nanoparticle exposure should provide more realistic insights into the possible health risks of airborne nanoparticles, researchers in Switzerland claim.  |
Chemistry World March 3, 2009 Lewis Brindley |
Sweet-toothed bacteria make their own vaccine With careful feeding, bacteria can produce vaccines against themselves, scientists in the US and China have found.  |
Chemistry World March 2, 2009 James Urquhart |
Shining a light on neural activity US researchers have developed a new way to activate brain neurons that could lead to less invasive methods of restoring function in damaged nerves and brain tissue.  |
Chemistry World March 2009 Emma Davies |
Fruits of the forest Last summer a team of UK scientists dragged the contents of their lab out into the jungle, to analyse the local atmosphere.  |
Chemistry World March 2009 Paul Docherty |
Column: Totally Synthetic Marine waters have produced some of the biggest celebrities of the natural product world - including the brevitoxins, saxitoxins and tetrodotoxins, 1 famous as much for the sheer human effort needed for their landmark syntheses as for their complexity and size.  |
Chemistry World March 2009 Philip Ball |
Column: The crucible Thermal motions on the molecular scale are not just useless noise  |
Outside March 2009 Ted Genoways |
Batman Returns They say you can't go home again -- to the strange, remote, threatened South American jungle where your larger-than-life, field-scientist dad discovered an extremely rare, weird-looking species called Lophostoma schulzi.  |
Chemistry World February 23, 2009 Nina Notman |
Resistant breast cancers re-sensitised to Tamoxifen A way to re-sensitise certain drug-resistant breast cancers to treatments such as Tamoxifen could offer better treatment for people with hard-to-beat cancers.  |
Wired Damon Tabor |
Q and A: Jack Horner Wants to Re-Create T. Rex From Chickens Flip the right genetic switches in a chicken embryo and you just might hatch a baby dino. Paleontologist Jack Horner intends to do it.  |
Chemistry World February 22, 2009 Phillip Broadwith |
Reading DNA Base by Base A technique to electrically detect individual DNA bases cut from a single strand of DNA has been developed by researchers in the UK.  |
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