3261 - 3280 van 9547 resultaten
- Palaeo-CSI: Mosasaurs were picky eatersWear marks on mosasaur teeth studied with 3D techniques for the first time/en/news/palaeo-csi-mosasaurs-were-picky-eaters
- Call for Seed Money Proposals Spring 2024Call for seed money proposals Migration and Societal Change, Spring 2024/en/news/call-for-seed-money-proposals-spring-2024
- Interview with Meta van der LindenMeta van der Linden was interviewed on her recent research on the effect of policy on recently arrived refugees’ integration in Rotterdam./en/in-de-media/interview-with-meta-van-der-linden
- Call for student volunteers at Migration and Societal Change ConferenceStudent volunteers are a critical component of any successful conference. As such, the Migration & Societal Change Conference is calling for friendly and responsive volunteers to help us for one the 22nd and 23rd of June in Utrecht./en/news/call-for-student-volunteers-at-migration-and-societal-change-conference
- €18 million for research on the sustainable use of our subsurfaceGrant opens up a barrel of possibilities for research into the impact of human use of our subsurface/en/news/eu18-million-for-research-on-the-sustainable-use-of-our-subsurface
- Earthquakes in Turkey and Syria: a Q&A with geophysicist Rob GoversUtrecht ľ¹Ï¸£ÀûÓ°ÊÓ hosted an online lecture on the earthquakes in Turkey and Syria, followed by a Q&A. Here, we bundle the main questions and answers./en/news/earthquakes-in-turkey-and-syria-a-qa-with-geophysicist-rob-govers
- RAUM Utrecht conference: Onze Stad, Ons CanvasOn Thursday 20 April 2023, RAUM Utrecht is organizing the second edition of the annual conference Onze Stad, Ons Canvas/Our City, Our Canvas. The Open Cities Platform is partner and contributes with a creative workshop./en/news/raum-utrecht-conference-onze-stad-ons-canvas
- Rise of oxygen in early ocean due to wobbling Earth's axisNearly 2.5 billion years ago, seas on our planet alternately contained more or less oxygen, due to the slow "wobble" of the rotating Earth./en/news/rise-of-oxygen-in-early-ocean-due-to-wobbling-earths-axis
- Microfossils shed light on the long fossil record of euglenoidsA 400-million-year evolutionary history of euglenoids/en/news/microfossils-shed-light-on-the-long-fossil-record-of-euglenoids
- Peter Pelzer nominated for national teacher prizePeter Pelzer, associate professor at the Department of Human Geography and Spatial Planning, has been nominated by the Dutch National Student Association (ISO) for the national Teacher of the Year election for Higher Education./en/news/peter-pelzer-nominated-for-national-teacher-prize
- EXCITE receives 5 million euro Horizon 2020 grantA consortium of fifteen European faculties specialised in electron and X-ray microscopy received a 5 million euro Horizon 2020 grant./en/news/excite-receives-5-million-euro-horizon-2020-grant
- Plate tectonics mystery solved: explanation for wandering pieces of oceanic platesNovel concepts have been tested with state-of-the-art computer simulations and are validated against geologic observations/en/news/plate-tectonics-mystery-solved-explanation-for-wandering-pieces-of-oceanic-plates
- Expert Roundtable: The Ongwen CaseSummary of an expert roundtable on the Ongwen Case before the International Criminal Court on Wednesday, March 24./en/news/expert-roundtable-the-ongwen-case
- The oldest traces of land on the early EarthThe first land masses rose above sea level 3.7 billion years ago, a billion years earlier than some estimates, and only 800 million years after the formation of the Earth./en/news/oldest-traces-of-land-on-early-earth
- Plate tectonics as a driver for cooling around Antarctica during global climate transition from greenhouse to icehouseHigh-resolution simulations of ocean circulations 34 million years ago show that the tectonic opening of Southern Ocean seaways caused a fundamental reorganisation of ocean currents, heat transport and initiated a strong Antarctic surface water cooling of 5 °C./en/news/plate-tectonics-cooling-antarctica
- Frits Hilgen wins prestigious Antonio Feltrinelli awardThe Antonio Feltrinelli prize reserved for Geosciences 2021 has been awarded to Frits Hilgen, associate professor of Geosciences at Utrecht ľ¹Ï¸£ÀûÓ°ÊÓ./en/news/frits-hilgen-wins-prestigious-antonio-feltrinelli-award
- Jelle Reumer chair of the Life Sciences and Society FoundationJelle Reumer has been appointed by NWO as chair of the Life Sciences and Society Foundation (Stichting Biowetenschappen en Maatschappij)/en/news/jelle-reumer-chair-of-the-life-sciences-and-society-foundation
- Sea butterflies, the unsung heroes in the climate crisisThe sea butterfly is very sensitive to climate change. As CO2 in the atmosphere increases, it causes acidification of the oceans. The sea butterfly's shell has to take the first hit./en/news/sea-butterflies-the-unsung-heroes-in-the-climate-crisis
- New evidence that global warming disrupts water cycleNew climate research provides first hint that climate change was able to disrupt the water cycle in the distant past – possibly even influencing ocean currents./en/news/new-evidence-that-global-warming-disrupts-water-cycle
- Cause of puzzling tsunami near Sulawesi unraveledThe key question was whether the tsunami occurred because of the earthquake itself, or because of the consequences of that earthquake, such as undersea landslides./en/news/cause-of-puzzling-tsunami-near-sulawesi-unraveled