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Cyborgs, death masks and Aphrodite | University of Cambridge
https://www.cam.ac.uk/news/cyborgs-death-masks-and-aphrodite6 Mar 2009: Does a contemporary artist see the body in the same way as an ancient artist?”. ... Juxtaposing the ancient and the modern, the beautiful and the scientific, a cast of Aphrodite stands close to a replica of Crick and Watson’s model of the double helix -
University of Cambridge Research magazine issue 22
https://www.cam.ac.uk/system/files/issue_22_research_horizons.pdf26 Sep 2013: In 2012 Dr Elizabeth Watson, a human geographer who specialises in eastern Africa, spent a month carrying out fieldwork in Marsabit. ... Proximity to town gives herders access to a ready market for milk and they are able to sign contracts with -
Keynote address given to the 6th International Exhibition and…
https://www.cam.ac.uk/about-the-university/how-the-university-and-colleges-work/people/vice-chancellor/speeches/keynote-address-6th-international-exhibition-riyadh-201531 May 2023: To be useful to society, a university must put its discoveries to work. ... Let me cite only 3 of the most notable ones:. In 1953, Cambridge scientists James Watson and Francis Crick discovered the structure of DNA. -
800 years of history in just 60 minutes | University of Cambridge
https://www.cam.ac.uk/news/800-years-of-history-in-just-60-minutes2 Nov 2009: Even Watson and Crick’s famous celebratory pint at The Eagle pub following their discovery of the double helix structure of DNA gets a retelling, with Watson commenting on what hard ... work it was, only for Crick to respond that it was “elementary, -
Pioneering research from the University of Cambridge Research…
https://www.cam.ac.uk/system/files/issue_30_research_horizons.pdf20 May 2016: Features. here’s a nationwide shortage of suitable organs for transplanting – but what. ... Professor Chris Watson describes himself as “piggybacking” on their work to develop a technique for perfusing livers. -
University of Cambridge Research Horizons Issue 8
https://www.cam.ac.uk/system/files/issue_8_research_horizons.pdf5 Jan 2009: a fully searchable format,with links to related researchactivities and resources across theUniversity. ... for instancebetween a Malanggan mortuary effigy and Watson and Crick’s structureof DNA. -
University of Cambridge Research magazine issue 24
https://www.cam.ac.uk/system/files/issue_24_research_horizons.pdf3 Jun 2014: Any large-scale reprogramming of living systems requires access to a large number. ... similar time, with a global-scale climate event being seen as the cause. -
University of Cambridge Research Horizons
https://www.cam.ac.uk/system/files/issue_18_research_horizons.pdf8 May 2012: Contents Issue 18, May 2012. Research news | 3. A million views under the microscope. ... Their aim is to. build a dementia registry to support bothservice and research. -
University of Cambridge Research Horizons Issue 12
https://www.cam.ac.uk/system/files/issue_12_research_horizons.pdf12 May 2010: a fine edifice in which towork, and Newton, Darwin, Crick and Watson would doubtless be astounded by thehigh-specification laboratories available to today’s researchers in the physical andbiological sciences. ... As a result, highlyredshifted objects -
University teaching awards honour excellence | University of Cambridge
https://www.cam.ac.uk/news/university-teaching-awards-honour-excellence1 Jul 2014: This year’s recipients received their awards at a ceremony attended by Vice-Chancellor Professor Sir Leszek Borysiewicz and Lord Watson of Richmond CBE, the University’s High Steward. ... Share. Published. 01 Jul 2014. Image. Vice-Chancellor
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