Field Trips
Area science museums host special programs of interest to budding scientists and their families.

The Third Degree
Test your reading of this issue of MichiganScience.

CMU Students Win State GIS Competition
Contribute to State Conservation

Mega Discovery
The giant shark megalodon dominated the seas as the largest marine predator to ever live.

Remarkable advances in analytical chemistry now make it possible to measure minute levels of both natural and synthetic compounds in human tissue and body fluids. This "biomonitoring" allows researchers to determine more precisely than ever the degrees to which individuals have been exposed to specific chemicals in the environment, and how exposures change over time.

Flawed Analysis Block Official Release of CDC Study
In the 1990s, an international team of scientists discovered a method to hatch microscopic animals from eggs more than a century old. The eggs were extracted from the remains of zooplankton collected from lake sediment and hatched in an incubator. The zooplankton subsequently grew to maturity. This feat of perpetual reproduction, which has come to be known as “resurrection ecology,” is revolutionizing the study of evolution.



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Posted: Dec. 20, 2006

Title: Science, Environment and Technology Initiative

Categories: About the Mackinac Center; Environment; Science and Technology; Telecommunications
Publication: General Article

Next page: Statesmanship Initiative

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