This figure was published a while back in Science, so it must be real.
(Jane Gitschier, University of California, San Francisco. Science, 1990)
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From Center for Science Education:
When: Friday, January 30, 2009 1:30 PM - 2:30 PM
Where: LSRC B101 Love Auditorium
Description: Bruce Alberts, a prominent biochemist strongly commited to the improvement of science education, began service as Editor-in-Chief of Science in March 2008. He is a…
Long time readers of ERV know that I have a soft-spot for animated depictions of cellular processes. Yes, they are beautiful (to a fault). Yes they are a neat way to explain complex topics to people. But I love them due to the sheer volume of lulz they provide when Creationists try to do them.…
The New York Times decided earlier this week that biological animation warrants its own article. About time! :)
Seriously, for those of you who haven't discovered BioVisions' amazing animations, you should check them out and/or use them in class - with the caveat that they're not "pure" data:…
Bruce Chapman, whose Disco. institute is still playing the greatest hits of the 1880s, writes that San Francisco is New Capital of California:
as a result of the recent election the state electorate apparently decided to be governed in its top leadership almost exclusively by San Franciscans.
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Where's the gene for leaving the toilet seat up located?
I heard that was a testosterone-motivated expression of the same gene that makes us women use ten times the necessary amount of toilet paper.
No gene for the toilet seat trait, but I can direct you to some game theory on the matter - "A Game Theoretic Approach to the Toilet Seat Problem"