We welcome Mark Stoeckle
We welcome Mark Stoeckle, MD as a Guest Investigator to the Program for the Human Environment. Dr. Stoeckle is a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Medical School and is…
We welcome Mark Stoeckle, MD as a Guest Investigator to the Program for the Human Environment. Dr. Stoeckle is a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Medical School and is…
…and the other articles relate strongly to our interests in ocean exploration (e.g., the 2016 National Ocean Exploration Forum), The International Quiet Ocean Experiment, and more generally human progress in…
Our address: Nurses Residence The Program for the Human Environment The Rockefeller University 1230 York Ave. (at 66th St.) New York, NY, 10065-6399 Phone: 212-327-7917 Fax: 212-327-7519 Email: phe@rockefeller.edu www.phe.rockefeller.edu…
…numerous fish sold for human consumption, most of which are wild. The US FDA Regulatory Fish Encyclopedia and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency lists of approved fish and shellfish include…
…Committee of the Census of Marine Life We are thrilled that the International Cosmos Prize, rooted in greenery, honors the blue world. Humanity every day has opportunities to see the…
…still images and videos, visit the news release about “hard-to-see” creatures. Learn about a carpet of bacteria the size of Greece and 35 elephants of marine microbes for every human….
…messengers with minimal errors. They dominated evolution for a couple of billion years, a domination a couple of million times longer than the Roman Empire. More recently, humanity has nourished…
PHE Researcher Iddo Wernick published a review of the recently released book A Question of Power: Why Electricity Will Remain the Essential Ingredient for Human Flourishing by Robert Bryce….
Humanity depends on ecological services performed by bacteria, archaea, fungi, and protists, which recycle nutrients, nurture plant growth, purify water, make cheese and wine, and decompose wastes. Microbes also play…
…barcodes for species identification versus human mitochondrial variation for the study of migrations and pathologies. Earlier work by Stoeckle and others looked at using the DNA barcoding method to document…