NOW Science!
An invitation to open your mind
Categories: Botany | Add a Comment
Dr Oliver Gilbert who died in 2005 was a pioneering botanist

Forty years after botanist Oliver Gilbert carried out his research on the banks of the Tyne, the North East is about to be inspired to look for lichens once again.

Dr Gilbert carried out his pioneering PhD in Biological Indicators of Air Pollution at Newcastle University in the 1960s, which led to a deeper understanding of [...]

Categories: Archaeology | Add a Comment
Birdoswald Fort

Archaeologists from Newcastle University are joining forces with English Heritage to carry out the first systematic excavation of a cemetery on Hadrian’s Wall.
Forming part of the World Heritage Site at Birdoswald Fort, Cumbria, this important Roman cremation cemetery is situated on a cliff edge. It is under serious threat from erosion, which has accelerated over [...]

Aspirin: wonder drug... again

A daily dose of aspirin can prevent the occurrence of cancer in people with a genetic predisposition towards Lynch syndrome, a Newcastle University scientist has told Europe’s largest cancer congress.
Lynch syndrome is a condition which accounts for around 5 per cent of all colon cancers.

Professor John Burn, from the Institute of Human Genetics at Newcastle [...]

Oxygen levels actually began to rise 2.8 billion years ago
Analysis of a rock type found only in the world’s oldest oceans has shed new light on how large animals first got a foothold on the Earth.
A scientific team including scientists from Newcastle University have for the first time managed to plot the rise and fall [...]

Professor Anatoly Zayats

Computers which use light to process large amounts of data faster than ever before are just one of many ground-breaking potential applications of a new £6 million research programme at Queen’s and Imperial College London, launched today, 1 September 2009.
The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) is funding the two universities to establish a [...]

Categories: Medicine | Add a Comment
Pregnant women are not getting enough Vitamin D

Many pregnant women are not getting enough Vitamin D even when they take supplements. The finding has been made as a result of research carried out by the Northern Ireland Centre for Food and Health (NICHE), which involves researchers from Queen’s University Belfast.
Dr Valerie Holmes from Queen’s School of Nursing and Midwifery co-authored the study [...]

Categories: Engineering | Add a Comment

Researchers at Queen’s University Belfast are pioneering a new technique for the use of banana plants in the production of plastic products.
The Polymer Processing Research Centre at Queen’s is taking part in a €1 million study known as the Badana project. The project will develop new procedures to incorporate by-products from banana plantations in the [...]

Dr Steven Bell

“There are numerous areas, from medical diagnostics to environmental monitoring, where the ability to use simple field tests to detect traces of important indicator compounds would be invaluable: – Dr Steven Bell.”
Scientists at Queen’s University Belfast are developing new sensors to detect chemical agents and illegal drugs which will help in the fight against the [...]

NOW Science! | An invitation to open your mind
An invitation to open your mind