Our Dying Planet, Here Be Dragons, Rat Island, Harnessed
Our Dying Planet, Here Be Dragons, Rat Island, Harnessed
January 1, 2012
Meet some of the people featured in the January 2012 issue of The Scientist.
For the first time, researchers culture a bacteria that uses a magnetic sulfide compound to navigate.
Scientists near the Fukushima plant are equipping wild monkeys with radiation collars to get better sense of their exposure in the wild.
Researchers explain the luminous quality of yellow buttercups.
Researchers have mapped out the DNA of what some scientists claim to be an arsenic loving bacterium.
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in ecology, from Faculty of 1000
New research suggests that a controversial class of stem cells originates in the heart and retains some ability to repair damaged tissue.