DNA and Art Law
Thanks to Diana Wierbicki, Dean Nicyper, and Eric Rayman, Jesse Ausubel presented a short talk on Some DNA Issues for Art Law to the Art Law Committee of the New…
Thanks to Diana Wierbicki, Dean Nicyper, and Eric Rayman, Jesse Ausubel presented a short talk on Some DNA Issues for Art Law to the Art Law Committee of the New…
Why are there species? The usual answer is sex: reproductive isolation maintains differences between species and reproductive mixing maintains similarity within species. According to recent work with bdelloid (the “b”…
Adam Green, of the Economist magazine’s Back to Blue Initiative, interviews Jesse here about industrialization of the oceans. And refers to our eDNA work in this article on Saving the…
Coverage of Columbia’s 1999 “State of the Planet Conference” in the Boston Globe. *No longer available, contact phe@rockefeller.edu if you wish more information….
An article about the 7th annual Martha’s Vineyard Environmental Film Festival (May 27-30) recaps the history, which began with Jesse Ausubel + Jacques Perrin. Jesse will host a set of…
We newly post “Dematerialization,” our 1989 paper that popularized the use of that word in environmental studies and helped start a wave of research about it….
The National Museum of Natural History of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC has added a small but excellent exhibit about the Census of Marine Life to the Sant Hall…
The new children’s book, The Little Girl Who Walked on Water But Who Didn’t Know How to Swim written by our esteemed colleague and friend Francois Sarano and illustrated by…
The Final Report of the 2016 National Ocean Exploration Forum (NOEF) has been posted on the updated NOEF website. The site includes the reports of the small groups that developed…
The article Why should mitochondria define species? Stoeckle M.Y., Thaler D.S. is now fully open access: DOI: 10.14673/HE2018121037 Coverage in Tekniikan Maailma, Finland: (Widespread genetic research revealed: Human genetic diversity…