Sold by Create your own from scratch Style: Bumper Sticker Entertain the cars sitting behind you in traffic with a custom bumper sticker. Make your car a reflection of you and your personality, show off your particular politics, or brag about your honor roll child! Get your point across with this quality bumper sticker that will outlast heavy rain, intense sunlight, and the most severe of traffic jams. Dimensions: 3"l x 11"w Made from durable vinyl with a strong adhesive back that will hold up under the most severe of conditions 100% weatherproof Printed with water-resistant ink that won’t fade or run
Her work helped save millions of lives from infection, diabetes, and anemia
Biochemists check out this awesome street sign! This will make the perfect piece for any Biochemist or maybe you are a Biochemist looking for a cool decor piece. Made of premium aluminum it will stand the test of time. This sign will look great in any room, home den, lab, cave, or office! Get this sign for your favorite Biochemist ! All of our street signs are made of premium materials. The sign itself is made of aluminum and will never rust providing years of enjoyment indoors and outdoors. No Cheap plastic!! You can use any street designation you would like on your signs. AVE, RD, ST, TRAIL, CT, BLVD.... CHOSE WHATEVER! Just let us know when you checkout. Personalize this durable aluminum sign with your favorite destination or customize this quality sign for a friend and gift it! Available in three sizes and ready to mount! This sign is a perfect finishing touch to your home decor - so unique! ✔ HOW TO ORDER 1. Select any options available from the drop down menus (Size, Color, etc). 2. Click the Add to Cart button. ✔ HOW TO PERSONALIZE 1. Please send us the custom name for the sign in the note section following your purchase. Please mention the main name for the street you would like and then the road designation, ie. DR, BLVD, AVE...etc. *Note: If I need to contact you about your order, I will do so via email. ✔ SIGN INFORMATION & MATERIAL - Quality aluminum sign - no cheap plastic! - Proudly made in the USA! - Comes with rounded corners and pre-drilled for easy hanging. - We use the highest quality of aluminum and inks. ✔ CUSTOMER SERVICE - Please feel free to ask any questions you might have. - We also offer all of our signs wholesale to retail businesses, so please email us if you would like to find out more information. The Lizton Sign Shop specializes in quality personalized custom aluminum signs for any occasion. These make the perfect sign for any man cave, office, basement, garage, college dorm, kids bedroom, game room, bar, pub, tavern or countless other places. All content and designs are subject to copyright and may not be reproduced in any form. All images, information and product designs are licensed property and any attempt to duplicate or copy will result in prosecution and fines. Goods & Services © 2002-Present The Lizton Sign Shop
About the Book "Leading medical expert Cara Florance gives kids the tools they need to learn about the ultimate instructor in the body: DNA"-- Book Synopsis The bestselling Baby University series is expanding with even more fascinating science for kids! Follow along as biochemist author Cara Florance turns complex topics into exciting, accessible adventures for your little learners!Introduce your budding genius to their body's ultimate messenger: DNA! Through simple, colorful illustrations and adorable characters, kids will learn all about how these amazing, twisty molecules give instructions to our cells and keep our bodies running smoothly. Packed with great information and scientific fun, the fantastic feats of DNA will keep any curious kid turning page after page!
Making grain-free bread canbe challenging. You have to have a good recipe and you have to measure precisely! Today, we have one great recipe for you to try.
Free vector icon. Download thousands of free icons of user in SVG, PSD, PNG, EPS format or as ICON FONT #flaticon #icon #chemistry #biochemistry #biology
.css-1sgivba{display:-webkit-box;display:-webkit-flex;display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;-webkit-align-items:center;-webkit-box-align:center;-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center;-webkit-flex-direction:row;-ms-flex-direction:row;flex-direction:row;gap:0.5rem;margin-bottom:var(--chakra-space-2);} .css-cosgki{font-size:16px;font-weight:var(--chakra-fontWeights-bold);} Product Type: Photographic Print Print Size: 18" x 24" Finished Size: 18" x 24" .css-1336n79{display:-webkit-box;display:-webkit-flex;display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;-webkit-align-items:center;-webkit-box-align:center;-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center;-webkit-flex-direction:row;-ms-flex-direction:row;flex-direction:row;gap:0.5rem;margin-top:var(--chakra-space-8);margin-bottom:var(--chakra-space-8);} Product ID: 35012897436A
Marsha Du (DOB: 10 MAY 1995) is a professional Biochemist, Athlete, Model, Influencer, and Science. She's well-known for sharing her athlete's practice tracks
A leading biochemist has busted the biggest myths around energy - including whether you really need coffee to function in the morning and if you can catch up on lost sleep at the weekends.
Nutritional biochemist, author and speaker Dr Libby recently released a book, The Energy Guide, full of advice for boosting your wellbeing every day. We wanted to share her tips on starting the day, as getting the morning right can lay such a good foundation for the day. We hope you enjoy this ex
JESSIE INCHAUSPÉ: I have discovered it could be as simple as deconstructing that lunchtime tuna sandwich so you eat the salad first, then the tuna, and the bread last.
Janice Reimer uses her math and science education to design and create complex modern quilts using solid color fabrics.
Michael Denton’s 1985 book Evolution: A Theory In Crisis was one of the most influential scientific critiques of Darwinian evolution in the 20th century.
Biochemist Rosa Vásquez Espinoza investigates the medicinal properties of microbes flowing in a sacred boiling river.
Making grain-free bread canbe challenging. You have to have a good recipe and you have to measure precisely! Today, we have one great recipe for you to try.
This is my linocut portrait of Canadian medical researcher Maud Menten (1879-1960), who has been called the "grandmother of biochemistry" and "a radical feminist 1920s flapper," and a "petite dynamo." Each print is 9.25" by 12.5" printed by hand from two blocks on Japanese kozo (or mulberry) paper. This edition is variable. Not only was she an author of Michaelis-Menten equation for enzyme kinetics (like the plot in indigo in my portrait), she invented the azo-dye coupling for alkaline phosphatase, the first example of enzyme histochemistry, still used in histochemistry imaging of tissues today (which inspired the histology background of the portrait), and she also performed the first electrophoretic separation of blood haemoglobin in 1944! Born in Port Lambton, Ontario, she studied at the University of Toronto, earning her bachelor's in 1904, and then graduated from medical school (M.B., bachelor's of medicine) in 1907. She published her first paper with Archibald Macallum, the Professor of Physiology at U of T (who went on to set up the National Research Council of Canada), on the distribution of chloride ions in nerve cells in 1906. She worked a year at the Rockefeller Institute in New York, where along with Simon Flexner, first director of the Institute, she co-authored a book on radium bromide and cancer, the first publication produced by the Institute - barely 10 years after Marie Curie had discovered radium. She completed the first of two fellowships at Western Reserve University (now Case Western Reserve University), then she earned a doctorate in medical research in 1911 at U of T. She was one of the first Canadian women to earn such an advanced medical degree.* She then moved to Berlin (travelling by boat, unfazed by the recent sinking of the Titanic) to work with Leonor Michaelis. Together they looked at enzyme-catalyzed reactions, found they occured at a rate proportional to the amount of the enzyme-substrate complex, and developed their famous equation for rate as a function of substrate. This work was critical to understanding how enzymes work and helped scientists develop means of blocking enzyme reactions (such as drugs like statins which inhibit enzymes which make cholesterol). She returned to North America and studied cancer from 1913 to 1914 in laboratory of the great surgeon George W. Crile at Western Reserve University (now Case Western Reserve University), in Cleveland. She completed a second doctorate in biochemistry at the University of Chicago in 1916. She was unable to find any good research opportunities for women in Canada at the time, so in 1923 she joined the faculty of the University of Pittsburgh as a demonstrator in pathology and also served as a clinical pathologist at Children’s Hospital in Pittsburgh. She held three positions at Children's Hospital involved: surgical pathologist, post-mortem pathologist, and haematologist. Despite holding these multiple demanding jobs she authored more than 100 papers. She discovered the utility of immunization of animals against infectious diseases. In 1944 she was the first to use electric fields to separate different proteins in a mixture based on size - a method called electrophoresis - to separate blood haemoglobin. Her wartime paper received far less attention than later work by Linus Pauling, to the point that this discovery is commonly misattributed to Pauling. Here is yet another example of the Matilda effect, where accomplishments of women in science are often forgotten and attributed to more famous men. This method remains a mainstay of lab techniques for biological systems. She characterised bacterial toxins from B. paratyphosus, Streptococcus scarlatina and Salmonella ssp. then successfully used in an immunisation program against scarlet fever in Pittsburgh during the 30's and 40's. Her research focused on pathology, nucleic acids, tumour cells, scarlet fever, bacterial toxins, and pneumonia. She was known as an outstanding hospital pathologist and teacher, who insisted on excellence in research and who had great compassion for the sick. In due course she was promoted to assistant professor (1923), and associate professor (1925), but did not reach the rank of full professor until 1949 when she was 70, one year prior to retirement. She had retained her Canadian citizenship throughout her time abroad and on retirement promptly moved home to Canada, joined the British Columbia Medical Research Institute and worked three more years, as long as her health would allow. Arthritis forced her second retirement at 75 and she died at 81 in Leamington, Ontario, a 100 km from ber birthplace. Menten never married or had a family, as mothers were usually prohibited from research, but when not revolutionizing biochemistry and medicine she lead a very full life. She was notorious for driving her Model T Ford badly through the University of Pittsburgh campus from 1918 to 1950. She played the clarinet. She mastered six languages including Russian, French, German, Italian, and Halkomelem of the indigenous Coast Salish, which she learned from school friends during her teens in Harrison Mills, British Columbia, where her father was a ferry boat captain. She was a mountain climber and once went on an Arctic expedition. She was an avid amateur astronomer. I am most charmed that she is yet another example of a scientist who was also an artist. She was a talented oil painter, painting colourful and detailed landscapes, still-life works and florals and she exhibited her paintings. The University of Pittsburgh, so slow to promote her to full professor, now has a yearly lecture and professorship named in her honour. In 1998 she was inducted into the Canadian Medical Hall of Fame and has been honoured by a memorial plaque at the University of Toronto. Her obituary in Nature, by Aaron H. Stock and Anna-Mary Carpenter states, "Menten was untiring in her efforts on behalf of sick children. She was an inspiring teacher who stimulated medical students, resident physicians and research associates to their best efforts. She will long be remembered by her associates for her keen mind, for a certain dignity of manner, for unobtrusive modesty, for her wit, and above all for her enthusiasm for research." It is astonishing that she is not a household name as her tremendous accompliments are still central to research today.
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How glucose accelerates aging Explained by biochemist Jessie Inchauspé. 📹Lewis Howes