New places to find DNA
…many museum specimens that might be used. For example, the American Museum of Natural History Icthyology Department collection includes over 35,000 fish skeletons as compared to about 2,500 tissue samples…
…many museum specimens that might be used. For example, the American Museum of Natural History Icthyology Department collection includes over 35,000 fish skeletons as compared to about 2,500 tissue samples…
…types that differ by NYC neighborhood. The WSJ story prompted an interview for Channel 4 TV news, complete with cockroach close-ups, and coverage in the London Times and US Metro….
…a single run. A total of 3,671 and 2,191 sequences represented at least 3 times were obtained from Pyrenean and mixed wild flower honey, respectively, which were matched to 22…
The Sunday 5 June Independent published an excellent article about forests by Andrew Marszal that reports on our recent analysis of forest density….
…of commercial DNA testing has enabled enterprising news stations to do their own research. Last year a Florida television station found that 6 of 11 restaurant entrees labeled as local…
Mark Stoeckle’s summer mentee, high school student Daisy Palaguachi, reports on her work in this poster “Yes, Virginia, There are Oysters in New York Harbor” describing use of aquatic environmental…
…history of Wikipedia and why it keeps getting better see Nicholson Baker’s review of John Broughton’s Wikipedia: The Missing Manual in March 20, 2008 New York Review of Books. Most…
We post a copy of a recently published talk Jesse gave at the UN Commission on Sustainable Development meetings in New York in April 1999, “Because the Brain Does Not…
…talk on Some DNA Issues for Art Law to the Art Law Committee of the New York City Bar based on the progress of the Leonardo Da Vinci DNA Project….
…by the Embassy of France Office for Science and Technology in the United States, Global Council for Science and Environment (GCSE), and Long Island University 5-6 April in New York City….