Showing Results for
- Academic Journals (62)
Search Results
- 62
Academic Journals
- 62
- Search Terms:
- 1From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Alok Jha [1]; Paul Smaglik [2] Two companies with their headquarters in different countries dominated the race to build automated high-throughput gene sequencers. Now Europe-based Amersham Pharmacia Biotech...
- 2From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Min Zhu [1]; Xiaobo Yu [2]; Per E. Ahlberg (corresponding author) [3] The discovery of two Early Devonian osteichthyan (bony fish) fossils [1, 2, 3, 4] has challenged established ideas about the origin of...
- 3From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): David Adam With the ink on the published human genome barely dry, an unseemly row has broken out at the monastery where Gregor Mendel founded the study of genetics almost 150 years ago. The argument is over...
- 4From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Richard Taylor [1] Architect reaches for the clouds How fractals may figure in our appreciation of a proposed new building. [illus. 1] We're all familiar with the Manhattan skyline of New York, with...
- 5From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Chien-liang Glenn Lin [1]; Irina Orlov [1]; Alicia M. Ruggiero; Margaret Dykes-Hoberg; Andy Lee; Mandy Jackson; Jeffrey D. Rothstein (corresponding author) Excitatory amino-acid carrier 1 (EAAC1) is a...
- 6From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Peter Aldhous [1] March 1999 was a tough time to be chief scientific adviser to the British government. An intensive campaign by environmentalists to convince the public that genetically modified (GM) crops...
- 7From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Jim Giles London Beleaguered British farmers are reeling from another animal health crisis this week, after cases of foot-and-mouth disease were confirmed at locations across the country. It is the first...
- 8From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Steve Bunk [1] Ever since the 1980s, when IBM researchers unveiled the scanning tunnelling microscope (STM) and the atomic force microscope (AFM), instruments that explore or probe the surface of ultra-tiny...
- 9From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): B. E. Cole [1, 2]; J. B. Williams [1]; B. T. King [1]; M. S. Sherwin [1]; C. R. Stanley [3] Quantum bits [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] (qubits) are the fundamental building blocks of quantum information processors, such...
- 10From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Patrick Champagne [1, 2, 3]; Graham S. Ogg [3, 4]; Abigail S. King [4]; Christian Knabenhans [1]; Kim Ellefsen [1]; Massimo Nobile [1]; Victor Appay [4]; G. Paolo Rizzardi [1]; Sylvain Fleury [1]; Martin Lipp...
- 11From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Axel Meyer [1] The Cichlid Fishes: Nature's Grand Experiment in Evolution by George W. Barlow Perseus: 2000. 335 pp. $28 David Star Jordan, the eminent ichthyologist, anti-darwinist and first president...
- 12From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Frank Wilczek (corresponding author) A large collaboration of scientists, known as experiment E821 at Brookhaven National Laboratory, announced on 9 February the latest result from their study of the...
- 13From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Monika Lachner [1]; Dónal O'Carroll [1]; Stephen Rea; Karl Mechtler; Thomas Jenuwein (corresponding author) Distinct modifications of histone amino termini, such as acetylation, phosphorylation and...
- 14From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): David Cyranoski [1] [illus. 1] China wears its participation in the international Human Genome Project (HGP) like a badge of honour. Last month, when the HGP published its sequence of the human genome in...
- 15From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Robert J. Cava (corresponding author) The field of superconductivity has been rocked by a startling announcement. For fifteen years, researchers have been delving into the mysterious and complex world of...
- 16From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedEuropean biology service gets public backing Paris The European Commission has approved a grant of 2.4 million euros (U$2.2 million) over three years to help develop a Europe-based global biological information...
- 17From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): David Adam London [illus. 1] One of the world's largest drug corporations, GlaxoSmithKline, has announced radical plans to rearrange its research laboratories into six units that, it says, will each walk,...
- 18From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Elizabeth A. Lindsay [1]; Francesca Vitelli [1]; Hong Su [2]; Masae Morishima [1]; Tuong Huynh [1]; Tiziano Pramparo [1]; Vesna Jurecic [3]; George Ogunrinu [4]; Helen F. Sutherland [5]; Peter J. Scambler [5];...
- 19From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Rex Dalton San diego The first US field test of a genetically modified insect is being planned in Arizona. Organizers say its outcome could help control the pink bollworm, a cotton pest. Researchers from...
- 20From: Nature. (Vol. 410, Issue 6824) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Kenji Kashiwaya (corresponding author) [1]; Shinya Ochiai [1]; Hideo Sakai [2]; Takayoshi Kawai [3] Quaternary records of climate change from terrestrial sources, such as lake sediments [1, 2] and aeolian...