Margaret Guthrie
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Articles by Margaret Guthrie

Paleo-ethno-what?
Margaret Guthrie | | 3 min read
Paleo-ethno-what? Student archaeologists excavating a room next to where the chile seed (inset) was found. Coutesy Of Michael Whalen, University of Tulsa By Margaret Guthrie Paul Minnis of the University of Oklahoma in Norman is obsessed with a chile seed. He found it buried last summer, two meters below ground, in a pile of trash left behind a millennium ago by indigenous people in northwestern Chihuahua, Mexico. "The

Laborin' lizards
Margaret Guthrie | | 3 min read
Anolis sagrei in Jamaica Credit: Courtesy of Luke Mahler / Harvard University" />Anolis sagrei in Jamaica Credit: Courtesy of Luke Mahler / Harvard University Head bobs, a series of quick pushups, and displays of a colorful double-chin. Life as a male anole lizard defending its territory against other male lizards is a lot of work. As is the life of the single-minded scientist who chooses to study them.

Dr. Chocolate
Margaret Guthrie | | 4 min read
With Halloween upon us, youngsters and adults alike will enjoy a night of regret-free linkurl:chocolate;http://www.the-scientist.com/article/display/20546/ bingeing. But how much do you really know about the sweet substance? If you're Stefan Bernhard, you can safely say you've made a lifetime study of the elixir of the gods. At a recent meeting of the linkurl:Experimental Cuisine Collective(ECC);http://experimentalcuisine.googlepages.com/ at New York University, Bernhard, professor of chemistry

Audubon, the fledgling
Margaret Guthrie | | 2 min read
Slideshow: A new book showcases the early drawings of an eventual master

A bee's life
Margaret Guthrie | | 3 min read
A member of the Augochlorine bee family pollinates a tomato flower. Credit: Courtesy of USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service" />A member of the Augochlorine bee family pollinates a tomato flower. Credit: Courtesy of USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service On an organic farm in central New Jersey, the plants are vibrating with bees. With a swift twist of her insect net, Rachael Winfree captures a wild bee s

Egg & Nest: A slideshow
Margaret Guthrie | | 1 min read
A new book explores the beauty of avian homebuilding and babymaking

A scientist trapped in an artist's body
Margaret Guthrie | | 3 min read
Ahna Skop masterfully balances research and creativity

An orchestra that works and plays
Margaret Guthrie | | 2 min read
A band of doctor-musicians travels to the UK to make collaborative connections

A fine time for equines
Margaret Guthrie | | 3 min read
The American Museum of Natural History's new exhibit explores the human - horse relationship When I was seven years old I decided I'd rather be a horse than a human. In an attempt to dissuade me from this point of view, my parents had me start riding lessons when I was nine. It didn't work. I am still convinced the horse is a superior creature. So I was the natural choice from __The Scientist__'s editorial office to review __The Horse__, a new exhibition at the American Museum of Natural Hist

Win, Place, or Cell
Margaret Guthrie | | 4 min read
Can a company harness stem cells to treat injured horses?

Antipodal beauty, literary panache
Margaret Guthrie | | 3 min read
Excerpts from Water, Ice & Stone: Science and Memory on the Antarctic Lakes











