NASA selects ORAU for postdoc program - Oak Ridge Today oakridgetoday.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from oakridgetoday.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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IMAGE: Trembath-Reichert running the winch for the CTD water sampler, which was used to bring fluids up to the ship from the bottom of the ocean. view more
Credit: Ben Tully
The subseafloor constitutes one of the largest and most understudied ecosystems on Earth. While it is known that life survives deep down in the fluids, rocks, and sediments that make up the seafloor, scientists know very little about the conditions and energy needed to sustain that life.
An interdisciplinary research team, led from ASU and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), sought to learn more about this ecosystem and the microbes that exist in the subseafloor. The results of their findings were recently published in
LLNL
Three Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory postdoctoral appointees have been selected to attend the 70
th annual Lindau Nobel Laureate meeting in Germany this June. The three selected to attend the meeting are, from left: Wei Jia Ong, Matthew Edwards and Oluwatomi (Tomi) Akindele.
Three Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) postdoctoral appointees have been selected to attend the 70
th annual Lindau Nobel Laureate meeting in Germany this June thanks to the University of California President’s 2021 Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings Fellows Program. The three selected to attend the meeting are Oluwatomi (Tomi) Akindele, Matthew Edwards and Wei Jia Ong.
The Lindau Nobel Laureate meeting is an international scientific forum that provides an opportunity for about 600 students and postdocs from around the world to meet with 30 to 40 Nobel laureates. The meeting is intended to foster an exchange among scientists of different generations, cultures and disciplines. The 2021
Boston University Social Innovation on Drug Resistance Program
Advocate Member
Drug resistance is an inevitable biological process driven by evolution, but made worse by human behavior, threatening to usher in a post-antibiotic era. While the new products created from the Combating Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria Biopharmaceutical Accelerator s (CARB-X) preclinical product development support are an important step in preventing that; an equally important challenge is to understand the impact of human behavior on the evolution of drug-resistant microbes. The tools for this effort will be interdisciplinary, rooted in the social sciences.
To advance these important goals, the Institute for Health System Innovation & Policy and CARB-X created the Social Innovation on Drug Resistance (SIDR) Program, an interdisciplinary postdoctoral fellowship program focused on the interaction of human behavior and drug-resistant infections.
UI leaders, students honored at Celebration of Excellence and Achievement Among Women uiowa.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from uiowa.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.