All Life articles – Page 116
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News
Coca Cola urged to cut out carcinogen
Health concerns over 4-methylimidazole are behind US heath watchdog’s petition
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Feature
A chemical account of evolution
Bob Williams and Ros Rickaby examine the co-evolving chemistry of the environment and life
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Feature
Feeding a growing world
Pesticides play a vital role in food production. So do they really deserve their tarnished public image? Sarah Houlton investigates
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Feature
Raising a glass to champagne
Andy Extance uncorks the secrets of sparkling wines’ unique taste and aroma
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News
€224 million EU antibiotics initiative launched
The project will bring together the pharmaceutical industry and academia, but some institutes have reservations
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Opinion
21st century toxicology
Thomas Hartung discusses the next generation of toxicity testing and the regulatory science of the future
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Opinion
Biotech's bravura performer
Bibiana Campos Seijo talks to scientist, philanthropist and serial entrepreneur Chris Evans
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Feature
Life, but not as we know it
Biology has been pretty successful at creating life, but now chemistry wants a crack at it
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News
Non-animal testing
L’Oréal has joined the US EPA to help develop alternatives to animal toxicity tests
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News
Sweden bans BPA in food packaging for under-threes
Government says it is taking a precautionary approach to the chemical to protect children
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News
Voluntary controls on antibiotics on US farms criticised
The US Food and Drug Administration has introduced guidelines to try to cut antibiotic use in livestock
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News
FDA backs use of BPA in food packaging
Agency rejects petition to ban the use of BPA in food contact materials, citing insufficient research
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Feature
Making light work
Could light prove to be the ultimate weapon in the battle against deadly superbugs?
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Research
Seeds of life incubated in proto-planetary nurseries
Organic molecules that were the potential precursors of life on Earth could have been synthesised in a part of the cosmic environment hitherto considered to be chemically inert
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Business
Children's lungs are more susceptible to nanoparticles
Infant lungs are particularly prone to nanoparticle deposition, be it from pollution or inhaled medicines
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Careers
The future of medicine
A medicinal chemistry course that’s giving students a real taste of pharma - failure, frustration and all
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Podcast
Green fluorescent protein
Attracting our attention with its fluorescent glow, here's Josh Howgego with GFP