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Author Profile
Michelle Taylor
Michelle Taylor
Editor-in-Chief
Michelle Taylor has worked on the Laboratory Equipment brand since 2010, and the Forensic brand since 2016. Well established in the industry, Michelle has attended dozens of scientific conferences and conducted interviews with key opinion leaders, including multiple Nobel Prize winners. Always keeping a pulse on the industry, Michelle enjoys
writing about CRISPR-Cas9, CTE, STEM, next-generation sequencing and more. Michelle received her BA in journalism from Elon University in North Carolina. Michelle can be reached at
[email protected]
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The Best Countries for Women in STEM
November 15, 2023
Published to coincide with STEM Day, the new study looked at all 38 OECD member countries and multiple variables, including the number of STEM job vacancies in each country, to complete the ranking.
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Forget Amazon: Drones Could Deliver Life-saving Medicine, Devices in Minutes
November 07, 2023
Two new studies are proposing an alternative delivery system in emergency medication situations: drones.
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The Remains of an Ancient Planet Sit at Earth’s Core
November 02, 2023
A new study suggests two continent-sized blobs of unusual material near the center of the Earth, first detected in the 1980s, may actually be the remnants of an ancient planet that violently collided with Earth billions of years ago in the same impact that created the moon.
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Researchers Grow Mouse Embryos in Space for the First Time
October 31, 2023
In a first, Japanese scientists and astronauts have successfully grown mouse embryos on the International Space Station in microgravity. The successful results may have big implications for future human reproduction in space.
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New Analytical Method Shows Moon is 40-Million-Years Older than Thought
October 24, 2023
Advanced technology that did not exist 50 years ago has now helped pinpoint the age of the moon based on crystals brought back to Earth by Apollo astronauts in 1972—and our rock is much older than previously thought.
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Anthony Fauci Describes his Next ‘Nightmare’
October 19, 2023
The pandemic may be over, but Fauci is still fearful. Not of SARS-CoV-2, nor of the next “inevitable pandemic,” he says. No, Fauci is most concerned that the public will forget just how deadly the COVID-19 pandemic was.
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Rodent Optic Nerve Head Wins Photomicrography Competition
October 17, 2023
In its 49th year, the annual Nikon Small World Photomicrography Competition has awarded first-place to Hassanain Qambari, assisted by Jayden Dickson of the Lions Eye Institute, for his vivid image of a rodent optic nerve head.
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Ancient Maya Techniques Could be Key to Solving Today’s Water Crisis
October 12, 2023
Researchers are championing an idea they think can help—and it’s not a new one. In fact, it’s extremely old, dating all the way back to the Ancient Maya civilizations of 600 to 800 C.E.
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Finding Better Ways to Image Dark Skin
October 11, 2023
The clinicians concluded that there is an ongoing need to understand and correct racial bias in pulse oximetry and other forms of medical technology.
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Artificial Molecule with ‘Superpowers’ Could be Medicine of the Future
October 06, 2023
They have successfully designed three-stranded DNA structures with three-stranded peptide structures, thus creating an artificial hybrid molecule that combines the strengths of both.
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3 Receive 2023 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for Planting the Seeds of Nanotechnology
October 04, 2023
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2023 rewards the discovery and development of quantum dots, nanoparticles so tiny that their size determines their properties.
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2023 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Goes to mRNA Vaccine Pioneers
October 02, 2023
The Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet has awarded the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine jointly to Katalin Karikó and Drew Weissman for their “discoveries concerning nucleoside base modifications that enabled the development of effective mRNA vaccines against COVID-19.”
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Desalination System Yields Drinking Water that’s Cheaper than Tap
September 29, 2023
The new system successfully turns seawater into drinking water thanks to a passive, extremely low-cost device that is inspired by the ocean and powered by the sun.
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Studies: ‘Talk’ to Plants to Save them from Climate Change
September 26, 2023
Two new studies this week—one from England, the other from California—have come to the same conclusion about how to protect plants from extreme climate change: just “talk” to them.
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Archaeologists Discover World’s Oldest Wooden Structure
September 22, 2023
Using a new, more accurate dating technology, researchers have found and confirmed the world’s oldest wooden structure—the earliest evidence from anywhere in the world of the deliberate crafting of logs to fit together.
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Ancient Roman Glass Naturally Creates Modern Material Over Centuries
September 19, 2023
As centuries passed, the fragments were covered by layers of dust and soil and exposed to a continuous cycle of changes in temperature, moisture and surrounding minerals. This caused the molecules in the glass to rearrange and recombine.
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Playgrounds Built on Former Waste Incineration Sites Could be Lead Hotspots
September 14, 2023
Researchers discovered that parks and playgrounds built on the sites of former waste incinerators can still have greatly elevated levels of lead in their surface soils—even more than 80 years after the incinerators stopped operating.
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Specific Combination of Bacteria Could be Making Daycare Children Sick
September 12, 2023
French researchers just discovered something novel about daycare environments: specific combinations of bacteria are worse than others for children’s health.
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DNA Links Living Man to Skull Pillaged by Germans 100 Years Ago
September 07, 2023
Scientists in Germany and Rwanda have genetically linked a 100-year-old skull to a male living today. The deceased individual was a high-ranking advisor to Mangi Meli, the king of the Chagga people in the late-1800s.
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Mold, Antibiotics Linked to Controversial Chemical Intolerance
September 05, 2023
In a new survey of over 10,000 U.S. adults, participants cited “exposure to mold” as the initiating event behind the development of their chemical intolerance.
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