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UNA Art Gallery is Augustine s | News | courierjournal net

FLORENCE – University of North Alabama alumna and Master Pastelist, Elaine Bailey Augustine, is now permanently associated with one of her special places as the school’s Art Gallery was named in her honor last week. The Florence resident has a long history of supporting the arts community, having begun her artistic journey as a child growing up in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Throughout high school and college, she honed her skill with color, strength of composition, and a variety of subject matter.  Augustine’s paintings have earned her national recognition and are held in corporate and private collections worldwide. Augustine graduated from UNA in May 2020 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Art. She also attended Agnes Scott College in Decatur, Georgia, and the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.

Living fossil discovered below Earth s surface

Tennessee Adds In-State OL As Walk-On to 2021 Class

Tennessee Adds In-State OL As Walk-On to 2021 Class Author: Apr 12, 2021 Tennessee s staff continues to leave no stone unturned on the recruiting trail. The Vols have added quality walk-ons since Josh Heupel took over, and given their scholarship numbers, these players could end up on scholarship next season, as the Vols work back towards the 85-limit. At the end of last week, Tennessee received the commitment of Clarksville (Tenn.) offensive lineman Nicholas Edwards, who had originally planned to play at North Alabama. Edwards announced the decision via his Twitter account earlier today. He added a note with more reasoning behind his decision.

These Bizarre Underground Microbes Haven t Evolved For 175 Million Years

These Bizarre Underground Microbes Haven t Evolved For 175 Million Years ScienceAlert 2 hrs ago © Chivian et al., Science, 2008 Rod-shaped CDA. A bacterium that dwells deep underground, living off chemical reactions triggered by radioactive decay, has been doing so unchanged for millions of years, new research has found. A genetic analysis of microbes of the species Candidatus Desulforudis audaxviator (CDA) collected from three different continents has revealed that the bacterium has barely evolved since they were last together on the same land mass, Pangaea. That means they have been in what scientists call evolutionary stasis for at least 175 million years, making CDA the only known subterranean living microbial fossil. This could have important implications for our understanding of microbial evolution.

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