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Chemistry World August 28, 2008 Victoria Gill |
Floral scents trick pollinators Flowers make a finely tuned mix of scents that attract birds and insects but also repel them in time to stop all their nectar being taken by a single pollinator, according to a new study by researchers in Germany. |
National Gardening Eve Pranis |
Flower/Pollinator Investigations As students actively explore blooms indoors and out, consider how to help them grasp the concept that every aspect of flowers is vital to their mission: to spread pollen and produce seeds. |
National Gardening Cathy Cromell |
Garden Guru: Thomas Ogren On a quest for allergy-free gardens |
National Gardening Carol Deppe |
Breeding Your Own Squash A guide to plant breeding and seed saving in the squash and pumpkin patch... |
Chemistry World March 1, 2009 Nina Notman |
Inorganic crystals turned into tubes Inorganic crystals dropped into water can be grown into long 'microtubes' of controlled size and shape, chemists in the UK have discovered. |
National Gardening Amy Bartlett Wright |
The Other Pollinators Many fascinating creatures do the essential work of transporting pollen. |
Chemistry World May 2010 |
Column: The crucible Tradition has it that the test tube was invented by Michael Faraday, perhaps as a convenient replacement for the wine glasses commonly used by earlier chemists. The most familiar facet of the test tube's iconography today is its association with the 'test tube baby'. |
Technology Research News April 9, 2003 |
Nanoscale rubber hoses debut Researchers from Cornell University have found a way to fabricate flexible tubes whose diameters are 100 nanometers. The tubes could be used to make stacked, interconnected fluidic networks designed to shunt fluids around biochips that sense and analyze chemicals. |