All Chemistry World articles in Archive 2004-2009 – Page 180
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Opinion
How many chemistry departments do we need?
The number and nature of departments delivering undergraduate chemistry degrees is changing. Paul O'Brien analyses how many are needed
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Opinion
Editorial: Being prepared
Chemical site security should be broadened to include natural disasters.
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News
Crystallographers widen therapeutic options for asthma
Chemists have used crystallographic analysis to identify a group of molecules they say could provide novel asthma drugs.
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News
Image of condiments wins photography award
Extreme close ups of salt and pepper have won the Visions of Science award.
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Feature
Preparing for a sustainable future
Sustainable production is a global business and products must comply with legislation in several countries. Bea Perks looks at the different approaches in the UK, Japan, China and the US
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Feature
Green tea: the great healer
Green tea promises to cure many of our ills but does it live up to expectations? Andrew Scott looks at the chemistry behind the health claims
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Feature
Two become one
Katharine Sanderson finds out about the merger of two companies and the birth of a new business, GE Healthcare, which aims to provide complete medical imaging and personalised healthcare solutions
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Feature
A challenging toxic legacy
Iraq's natural environment is in a dire state, but the security situation is seriously hampering the clean-up operation, as Simon Hadlington reports
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Feature
Battle with the prions
Prion diseases such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob are invariably fatal. But, as Dennis Rouvray reports, better insights into the protein chemistry involved are leading to new therapies
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News
Children and pregnant mothers not suitable for pesticide testing, EPA rules
Pesticide testing on children and pregnant women who would not otherwise be exposed to pesticides should be banned.
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News
27 September 2005: Sulfur and iron launch sneak attack on the Mary Rose
Henry VIII's warship, Mary Rose, is under threat from the sulfur and iron contained in its wooden frame.
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News
26 September 2005: Conservation scientists crack the glass disintegration mystery
Unstable elemental composition, seasonal dampness and wooden display cabinets are responsible for the disintegration of historical glass.
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News
23 September 2005: Safety assurances rest on inadequate data, warns report on crop spraying
Ministers are being misled over pesticide health risks, according to a government-commissioned report.
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News
22 September 2005: Nutritionists shake up the functional foods debate
A leading nutritionist has questioned the wisdom of a chemical company's plans to develop milkshakes tailored to an individual's nutritional requirements.
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News
21 September 2005: Stressed GM potatoes contain increased levels of toxic metabolites
Genetically modified potatoes can produce greater amounts of toxins after exposure to blights and viruses, say UK researchers.
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News
21 September 2005: Creative chemists win MacArthur money
A chemist and a biochemist are two of the 25 recipients of the 2005 MacArthur grants worth $500 000 (£276 000) to further their 'exceptional' work.
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News
20 September 2005: Chemists uncover renaissance secrets at the V&A
Italian researchers have used x-ray fluorescence and fibre optic spectroscopy to uncover the techniques used by renaissance ceramics artist Maestro Giorgio Andreoli.
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News
20 September 2005: HLS continues to seek solution to NYSE delay
Embattled UK contract research organisation Huntingdon Life Sciences still plans to start trading on the New York Stock Exchange despite 'unprecedented' delay.
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News
19 September 2005: Peer review analysts lay into industrial sponsors
The pharmaceutical industry has come in for severe criticism over its role in clinical research sponsorship.