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Month: May 2021

kary mullis, pcr, & covid tests

May 19, 2021 | Alison | history of science, nature of science, science and society

You’ve probably come across the name Kary Mullis recently, via social media. He’s best remembered for his invention (along with a team of other researchers) of the Polymerase Chain Reaction, or PCR for short (and for many biology students was probably immortalised in their memories via this earworm of an advertisement¹). This turned out to […]

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covid-19 infection and how the spike protein is involved in doing harm

May 5, 2021 | Alison | nature of science, new science stories, science and society

Just this morning a journalist sent me a link to a press release about a new paper looking at how SARS-Cov-2 affects the vascular system, & asked me to comment on it for a article. If you’d like to read the actual paper you can find it here, but be aware that it does get […]

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Swan girl - portrait of the author as a young scientist This blog in response to comments from secondary school biology teachers. I hope to use it as a way of encouraging critical thinking, looking at scientific papers that are relevant to the Level 3 curriculum and to Scholarship.

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  • sam bailey on isolating viruses, and why she is wrong
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  • covid-19 infection and how the spike protein is involved in doing harm
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