Page 24 of 30Results 231 to 240 of 300, 28 May - 21 October 2015
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University alumni return to offer careers advice to students
The University of Aberdeen Careers Service and the School of Biological Sciences hosted a joint event this week to help students with their future career prospects.
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Disruptions to the rhythms of life
Plants and animals, including humans, show strong seasonal cycles in health, behaviour and abundance, but these "rhythms of life" are being disrupted according to a study published today in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
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Laura swaps Old Aberdeen for New York
A University of Aberdeen PhD student has swapped 23 St Machar Drive for the United Nations headquarters.
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Consequences of loss of ice in Arctic investigated
Researchers from the University of Aberdeen are set to investigate what consequences the rapidly shrinking sea ice cover in the Arctic is having on the marine ecosystem.
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'Evolutionary fitness' key in determining why some females more physically attractive than others
Scientists from the University of Aberdeen have been working as part of an international collaboration co-ordinated by the Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing to try and discover why there is a link between body fatness and perceived physical attractiveness.
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Tools created by University spinout could help prevent disease
In-demand 'zebrafish' antibodies produced through a University spinout project are expected to contribute to immune studies for vaccine development and disease prevention.
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Double celebration for Aberdeen student
A student from the University of Aberdeen is celebrating not only graduating with a degree in Forestry but also winning an inaugural award from UPM Tilhill for her studies.
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Pandas are officially cool, according to new research
Scientists from the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), Beijing Zoo and the University of Aberdeen have shown that giant pandas have an exceptionally low metabolic rate - and as a result have also discovered that the endangered bears are, quite literally, cool.
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Where in the UK are New Zealand Flatworms and what are they up to?
Members of the public are being asked to help University of Aberdeen researchers pinpoint just how far a species, that wound up in the UK unintentionally, has travelled across the country.
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Award for Excellence in Teaching - Undergraduate Winner Announced!
We are delighted to announce that Dr Emily Nordmann, School of Psychology, is the winner of the 2014 Award for Excellence in Teaching in the College of Life Sciences and Medicine for Undergraduate Teaching.