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image: Medicinal Alchemy, circa 1512

Medicinal Alchemy, circa 1512

By | March 1, 2011

During the Middle Ages, alchemists developed sophisticated ways to tap the medicinal powers of the Earth’s bounty. Liber de Arte Distillandi, published in 1512, is a layman’s guide to the preparation of these natural medicines.

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image: Environmental Impact

Environmental Impact

By | March 1, 2011

Research in behavioral epigenetics is seeking evidence that links experience to biochemistry to gene expression and back out again.

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image: Resistant to Failure

Resistant to Failure

By | March 1, 2011

A Duke University researcher survives a sticky situation at a federal research institution to make major strides in determining the genetic roots of Staphylococcus aureus antibiotic resistance.

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image: Ted Cohen: Travelling for TB

Ted Cohen: Travelling for TB

By | March 1, 2011

Assistant professor, Department of Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health. Age: 37

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image: Mitotic Hijacker

Mitotic Hijacker

By | March 1, 2011

How a parasite sneakily ensures its own replication

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image: Top 7 From F1000

Top 7 From F1000

March 1, 2011

A snapshot of the highest-ranked articles from a 30-day period on Faculty of 1000

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image: Inside the mind of Fritz Kahn

Inside the mind of Fritz Kahn

By | February 1, 2011

For more than 40 years, German gynecologist and legendary science writer Fritz Kahn (1888-1968) captured the imagination of an international audience with hundreds of wildly inventive illustrations and more than a dozen popular science books. The fol

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image: Freeze-Frame

Freeze-Frame

By | February 1, 2011

Tricks for probing a cell’s moving parts

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image: Impure Genius

Impure Genius

By | February 1, 2011

Lewis Cantley has made a career of turning chemical contaminants into groundbreaking discoveries—including novel lipids, potent inhibitors, and kinases involved in cancer.

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image: Light Therapy, circa 1939

Light Therapy, circa 1939

By | February 1, 2011

Around the turn of the 20th century—before sunscreens hit the market and the damaging effects of UV radiation were widely appreciated—physicians saw the sun mostly as a source of healing. Sunlit spas nestled high in the mountains became very popula

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