Scientists have discovered a new species of chiton, an ancient marine mollusk that has remained virtually unchanged for the ...
Not all defects are visible with the same microscope. Explore how resolution, contrast, and signal interpretation shape semiconductor failure investigations.
A new study of ancient pottery adds to evidence that hunter-gatherers in Europe ate more than meat and developed early ...
The three-phased development of MiBC expands technological tools at the Institute’s disposal as well as additional ...
Shards from the Baltic region showed higher traces of freshwater fish, with some regions also including berries, sea beetroot, flowering rush, beets, and sea club-rush tubers. There were also traces ...
FTIR microscopy is a robust analytical method used to identify contaminants at specific locations within a sample. By using visual imaging to pinpoint the exact location of contamination, an infrared ...
A new species of chiton — a tiny, armored marine mollusk from a lineage roughly 500 million years old — has been identified ...
A creature whose relatives evolved roughly 500 million years ago — before dinosaurs, before trees — was sitting on the ocean floor off South Korea, misidentified as something it wasn’t. Two biologists ...
Researchers set a Guinness record with a tiny QR code, exploring ceramics for long-lasting, zero-energy digital data storage.
Tiny pits, webbing patterns, and a dusting of nanoparticles are not what most people picture when they think about farming.
Cyanobacteria, as they still exist today, were the first organisms to carry out photosynthesis and release oxygen. Produced in primeval oceans about 2.5 billion years ago, this oxygen accumulated in ...
Images: Carolin Dreher, Jeremiah Shuster Scanning electron microscope images of the spherical cyanobacteria Synechococcus sp.