Glaciers on Mars: looking for the ice
One of the scientists’ main interests in Mars research is water. Is there water on Mars?
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One of the scientists’ main interests in Mars research is water. Is there water on Mars?
‘The Elements’ and ‘The Compounds’ are two series of professionally produced podcasts, each lasting between 5 and 7 minutes.
How to fossilize your hamster is a great book to have even if you don’t have a hamster that needs fossilization.
The ‘Science for All’ blog, associated e-book and printed book contain a collection of short essays on a series of topics designed to appeal to young students.
You are what you eat – quite literally. Our diet can influence the tiny changes in our genome that underlie several diseases, including cancer and obesity.
Cell’s movements are important in health and diseases, but their speed is the crucial point for the 2013 World Cell Race organised by Daniel Irimia.
Many naturally occurring compounds are useful in medicine – but they can be fabulously expensive to obtain from their natural sources. New scientific methods of synthesis and production are overcoming this problem.
For doctor Stefan Pfister, efforts to cure cancer happen at the hospital and in the laboratory.
In Sweden there lives a small, green dragon called Berta, who invites young children to join her adventures in Dragon Land – all of which are about chemistry.
Bring discovery into the classroom and show students how to evaluate Planck’s constant using simple equipment.
Glaciers on Mars: looking for the ice
Podcasts ‘The Elements’ and ‘The Compounds’, by Chemistry World, the magazine of the Royal Society of Chemistry
How to fossilize your hamster, by Mike O’Hare
Blog: Ciência para Todos/ Science for All, by Haidi D. Fiedler Nome and Faruk Nome
Food that shapes you: how diet can change your epigenome
Making the right moves
Inspired by nature: modern drugs
Doctor in the morning, researcher in the afternoon
The way of the dragon: chemistry for the youngest
Classroom fundamentals: measuring the Planck constant