Cambridge Ideas - Just Add Water
11 November 2010Rotifers are tiny animals that survive against all the odds.
Research
Rotifers are tiny animals that survive against all the odds.
Striving for, and achieving, high performance in teams has become a major business imperative.
The remarkable story of a daring World War II operation in which hundreds of people fleeing the Japanese advance through Burma were rescued by elephant...
Scientists and clinicians across Europe have joined forces to improve the efficacy and safety of neural transplantation in Parkinson’s disease.
A tiger at Shepreth Wildlife Park recently underwent surgery at the Queen's Veterinary Hospital, Department of Veterinary Medicine in a bid to save her life.
Research across the University is helping to clean up water in regions around the world.
Using satellite imagery, researchers have developed the first systematic approach for tracking the recovery of regions stricken by natural disaster.
Professor Jane Clarke’s laboratory was one of the first in the world to combine atomic force microscopy with protein engineering to ‘visualise’ the mechanical unfolding...
Two research programmes in the Faculty of Education are bringing new insight to the impact and implementation of education in developing countries.
A new research collaboration will investigate the capacity of radio to facilitate citizen-led governance in developing countries.