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Lottie Peppers

Human Genome Project Information - 0 views

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    Comprehensive archive of the human genome project
Lottie Peppers

http://www.acs.org/content/dam/acsorg/education/resources/highschool/chemmatters/archiv... - 0 views

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    Metals are what make smartphones so "smart." An average smartphone may contain up to 62 different types of metals. One rather obscure group of metals-the rare-earth metals-plays a vital role. The rare-earth metals include scandium and yttrium, as well as elements 57-71. Elements 57-71 are known as the lanthanides, because they begin with the element lanthanum.
Lottie Peppers

Science House- Enzymes - 0 views

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    Lots of resources for enzymens
Lottie Peppers

Climate Change | US EPA - 0 views

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    Archived 1/19/17 EPA website
Lottie Peppers

Category Archives: NSF Videos and Lessons - 0 views

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    Lesson and videos produced with NSF funding
Lottie Peppers

Using CRISPR To Learn How a Body Builds Itself - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    Sulston worked alone, in silence, hunched over a microscope for eight hours a day. By studying and drawing worms of various ages, he figured out the ancestor and descendants of each of their cells. It was a monumental piece of science. Sulston mapped the complete history of an individual, the comprehensive family tree of a single body. "We had the entire story of the worm's cells from fertilized egg to adult," he later said, upon accepting the Nobel Prize for his work.
Lottie Peppers

The Terrible Toll of the Tuskegee Study - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    Known officially as the Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male, the 40-year experiment run by Public Health Service officials followed 600 rural black men in Alabama with syphilis over the course of their lives, refusing to tell patients their diagnosis, refusing to treat them for the debilitating disease, and actively denying some of them treatment.
Lottie Peppers

The Girl Who Turned to Bone - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    Unexpected discoveries in the quest to cure an extraordinary skeletal condition show how medically relevant rare diseases can be.
Lottie Peppers

Low-Fiber Diets Kill Off Some Species of Gut Bacteria - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    Sonnenburg, his wife Erica, and the graduate student Samuel Smits confirmed this idea in a recent experiment. The researchers started with mice that had been raised in sterile bubbles and then loaded with identical collections of gut microbes. They then fed these mice a high-fiber diet, before randomly switching half of them to low-fiber chow for seven weeks. Predictably, the fall in fiber caused upheavals in the rodents' guts. In the low-fiber group, the numbers of 60 percent of the local microbe species fell dramatically, and some remained low even after the mice returned to high-fiber meals. Those seven low-fiber weeks left lingering scars on the animals' microbiomes.
Lottie Peppers

Artificial Womb Works for Lambs, Study Shows - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    For a study published Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications, Partridge and other researchers from Philadelphia suspended premature lambs, a close animal model for human fetuses, in a liquid-filled, artificial womb, allowing them to further develop for four weeks-longer than in past similar attempts.
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