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  • Tim's blog

    Ancient zombie ants, liquefying your body, recovering meteorites and more. What Tim's talking about on radio this week.

    25 August, 2010

    This week on radio, Tim Thwaites is talking about tracking and recovering meteorites; liquefying your body; chlorophyll that works with low energy light; ancient zombie ants; and more… 1. Desert fireballs—An intelligent camera system has been set up to track and recover meteorites in the Nullarbor. It is expected to detect about three or four…

    Read More Ancient zombie ants, liquefying your body, recovering meteorites and more. What Tim's talking about on radio this week.Continue

  • Tim's blog

    Skipping stones, African dust, the mystery of allergies and more. Tim on radio 18 August

    18 August, 201018 May, 2012

    This week on radio, Tim Thwaites is talking about why pierced ears became inflamed; how the physics of skipping stones can improve flying; boosting your brain; using your home computer to find heavenly bodies; and more…

    Read More Skipping stones, African dust, the mystery of allergies and more. Tim on radio 18 AugustContinue

  • Tim's blog

    What Tim’s talking about on radio – 10 August

    10 August, 201018 May, 2012

    This week on radio, Tim Thwaites is talking about the extinction of Australia’s megafauna; regenerating hearts and limbs; the essence of being a sponge; childhood obesity; and more…

    Read More What Tim’s talking about on radio – 10 AugustContinue

  • Tim's blog

    What Tim’s talking about on radio – 4 August

    4 August, 201018 May, 2012

    This week on radio, Tim Thwaites is talking about the decline of tiny seaweeds in the ocean; diet and disease; orang-utan couch-potatoes; high tech odour prevention; and more…

    Read More What Tim’s talking about on radio – 4 AugustContinue

  • Tim's blog

    What Tim's talking about on radio – 4 August

    4 August, 2010

    This week on radio, Tim Thwaites is talking about the decline of tiny seaweeds in the ocean; diet and disease; orang-utan couch-potatoes; high tech odour prevention; and more…

    Read More What Tim's talking about on radio – 4 AugustContinue

  • Chemistry-RACI

    Can we feed nine billion people by 2050?

    7 July, 201018 May, 2012

    IUPAC Plenary Six and Seven, Wednesday 9:45am Chris Leaver, University of Oxford The world’s population has more than doubled in the past 50 years and the relative abundance of food has kept pace, with the poorest benefiting most. Yet one billion people are malnourished and live below the poverty line.

    Read More Can we feed nine billion people by 2050?Continue

  • Media releases | Verva

    Eye drug finds new life in Geelong diabetes trial

    23 April, 201018 May, 2012

    People with diabetes invited to participate in trial Media release: Geelong, Friday 23 April 2010 Modern drugs can stabilise adult onset diabetes but with some serious side effects. A Geelong-based company, Verva Pharmaceuticals, has a new approach – a drug used for many years to treat eye disease. In animal testing, the drug restored sensitivity…

    Read More Eye drug finds new life in Geelong diabetes trialContinue

  • ICONN | Media releases

    World’s tiniest scales

    24 February, 201018 May, 2012

    Measuring the contents of a single cell: the nano-machinery of life Scientists are developing a tiny set of scales that will be capable of weighing each of the 100 million or so different proteins in a human cell.

    Read More World’s tiniest scalesContinue

  • Media releases | New Zealand

    A clean, safe vaccine booster

    29 October, 200818 May, 2012

    Most vaccines need a ‘magic’ booster or adjuvant to boost our immune response to the vaccine. But the best adjuvants are too toxic for human use.

    Now NZ scientists believe they have created a powerful and safe adjuvant and are trialling it as part of a new cancer vaccine.

    Read More A clean, safe vaccine boosterContinue

  • Media releases | New Zealand

    Counting viruses and mustering molecules

    29 October, 200818 May, 2012

    How many viruses are there in your blood? How many dangerous nano-particles in your car exhaust?

    qViro is a revolutionary New Zealand invention that offers the potential to quickly and cheaply answer these questions. It’s a feature of Ausbiotech – the national biotechnology conference – being held in Melbourne today.

    The beta version is the size of a coffee grinder and can muster and count the number of viruses in a sample in minutes. This is a truly portable, desktop instrument that is powered from the USB drive of a computer.

    Its competitors are the size of washing machines, may take days to get a result, or cost upwards of $50,000.

    Read More Counting viruses and mustering moleculesContinue

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