Her work was so quiet and fundamental—to academia and industry, all over the world—that she believed her job would be safe.
Bangladesh’s National Curriculum and Textbook Board (NCTB) has made some significant changes to school textbooks for the 2025 academic year, reshaping how the country’s history is told.
Based on an extensive data review of surface and drilling geochemistry, WYX believes the project boasts exceptional growth potential with multiple targets west and south of the current tenure areas.
Using radioactive isotope systems to determine the age and origins of minerals and rocks, primarily as tracers of magmatic processes and the evolution of the earth. Organic molecules in natural waters ...
Here, the 12 new books you should read this month. Scaachi Koul’s follow-up to her 2017 essay collection, One Day We'll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter, looks at the radical changes the ...
Participants will develop AI models utilising datasets such as geophysics, geochemistry, remote sensing, and borehole data, focusing on critical minerals like REE, Ni-PGE, and Copper.
Novels by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Karen Russell, nonfiction by Ezra Klein, new “Hunger Games” and “Wicked” prequels and more. Credit...The New York Times Supported by It’s been ...
Critic Bethanne Patrick recommends 10 promising titles, fiction and nonfiction, to consider for your March reading list. Winds of change show up this month. One author considers why our brains ...
In her children’s stories, Clarice Lispector disguised philosophical questions in cheerful, kooky fables about exuberant animals with places to be. By Joumana Khatib Laurie Halse Anderson ...
As South Korean schools kicked off the new semester on Tuesday, the government's ambitious plan to introduce digital textbooks using artificial intelligence has yet to gain full traction.
Mark Sephton, Professor of Organic Geochemistry at Imperial College London, said jet fuel disintegrates more quickly than crude oil, and warmer temperatures also speed biodegradation.
Mark Sephton, professor of Organic Geochemistry at Imperial College London, also said that the relatively small hydrocarbons of jet fuel could be degraded by bacteria more quickly than the larger ...