Physical sciences illuminate neurodegenerative diseases
28 May 2012What do physicists, chemists, mathematicians and biologists have in common? One of the answers at Cambridge is a shared interest in unravelling the processes behind...
Research
What do physicists, chemists, mathematicians and biologists have in common? One of the answers at Cambridge is a shared interest in unravelling the processes behind...
The teaching of history in schools is vitally important to how we see ourselves, and our stories, says Dr Nora Berend, who argues for a...
It seems at once the simplest and most complex of health problems: by eating healthily, not smoking, being more active and cutting down on alcohol,...
Research suggests that circadian clocks shared a common ancestor.
The history of humanity, from our earliest ancestors to today’s indigenous people spread across the globe, is being retold as a Cambridge University museum reopens...
Dr Amanda Vincent – one of the world’s leading experts on seahorses and their relatives – is spending a year at Cambridge’s Department of Geography...
Early tetrapod primarily used front limbs to move and its back limbs for balance.
Denis Alexander is the Director of The Faraday Institute for Science and Religion. Here he discusses two upcoming talks.
Population studies on a vast scale are providing the power to enable accurate risk assessment – and intervention – into cardiovascular disease.
A collection of artefacts made by prisoners from the Channel Islands in World War II has gone on display in Jersey to mark the 70th...