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Managed Care April 2004 Thomas Morrow |
Transdermal Patches Are More Than Skin Deep After modest beginnings, transdermal patches are now taking advantage of nanotechnology and other novel techniques to improve drug delivery.  |
Geotimes April 2004 |
Early volcanic living? Microbes thrive in unexpected places, including seafloor hotspots, where energy and nutrients from hydrothermal vents or volcanic activity make life easy.  |
IDB America April 2004 Roger Hamilton |
Bioprospecting, with no Apologies Costa Rica uses home-grown scientific muscle to unlock nature's treasure chest, maximizing the benefits from its bioligical reasources.  |
Science News April 24, 2004 |
DNA Day An ivitation to commemorating the completion of the Human Genome Project in 2003 and the description of DNA's structure as a double helix in 1953.  |
Smithsonian May 2004 Douglas Chadwick |
A Mine of Its Own Where miners used to dig, an endangered bat now flourishes, highlighting a new use for abandoned mineral sites.  |
Reactive Reports Issue 37 David Bradley |
X-rays Reveal PSII Secret The possibility of using solar energy and water as a cheap source of hydrogen and oxygen is a step closer thanks to British researchers who discovered how the photosynthetic centre in a cyanobacterium works.  |
Bio-IT World April 16, 2004 |
Portraits in Proteomics Advances in identifying protein biomarkers are spurring new hope in cancer diagnostics, expediting detection and easing testing.  |
Bio-IT World April 16, 2004 Kevin Davies |
A Black Eye for Bioethics Elizabeth Blackburn, an internationally renowned cell biologist, received a surprise phone call from the White House, informing her that her services on the President's Council on Bioethics would no longer be required.  |
Bio-IT World April 16, 2004 Robert Frederickson |
Trial Separations Protein separation through the digital ProteomeChip microchip takes merely minutes, resulting in significantly increased productivity.  |
Technology Research News April 7, 2004 |
DNA folds into paired pyramids Researchers from the Scripps Research Institute have formed strings of DNA that spontaneously fold into a wireframe octahedron, taking a step forward in the quest to use DNA to make nanoscale templates.  |
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