Researcher Academy - Manuscript Fundamentals. As you embark on your publishing career, it can feel like there’s an endless array of procedures, protocols and best practice to absorb.
In this series of modules, we walk you through some of the key points you should pay attention to during that all-important manuscript preparation stage. We explain how the publishing cycle works from submission and peer review through to decision time! You will learn about the various elements in a traditional research article and receive valuable tips on how to maximize their potential. Additionally, we highlight the importance of the abstract and how you can make sure yours packs a punch.
As you embark on your publishing career, it can feel like there’s an endless array of procedures, protocols and best practice to absorb. In this series of modules, we walk you through some of the key points you should pay attention to during that all-important manuscript preparation stage. Pigeon Breeding: Genetics At Work. Type the email address of the account you want to sign in with.
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Please try again in a few minutes. What causes antibiotic resistance? - Kevin Wu. Everything Dies, Right? But Does Everything Have To Die? Here's A Surprise : Krulwich Wonders... A puzzlement.
Why, I wonder, are both these things true? There is an animal, a wee little thing, the size of a poppy seed, that lives in lakes and rivers and eats whatever flows through it; it's called a gastrotrich. It has an extremely short life. Hello, Goodbye, I'm Dead It hatches. Sad, no? It's a hydra. AsapSCIENCE. Stated Clearly. CrashCourse. Understanding Evolution. The bacteria that changed the world - May, 2017 The make-up of Earth's atmosphere, once the domain of Earth science textbooks, has become an increasingly "hot" news topic in recent decades, as we struggle to curb global warming by limiting the carbon dioxide that human activity produces.
While the changes that humanity has wrought on the planet are dramatic, this isn’t the first time that one species has changed Earth’s atmosphere. Three billion years ago, there was no free oxygen in the atmosphere at all. Life was anaerobic, meaning that it did not need oxygen to live and grow. That all changed due to the evolution of Cyanobacteria, a group of single-celled, blue-green bacteria. Read the rest of the story here | See the Evo in the News archive. Exploring Ecosystems: Coastal Food Webs.