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Ancient algae provides clues of climate impact on today's microscopic ocean organisms

2014-11-27 13:00:00| LifeSciencesWorld

[NEWS] G.Harris@soton.ac.uk 44-023-805-93212 University of Southampton @unisouthampton A study of ancient marine algae, led by the University of Southampton, has found that climate change affected their growth and skeleton structure, which has potential significance for toda…

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9 Stunning Photos of Microscopic Creatures

2014-10-31 22:03:28| PC Magazine Software Product Guide

Rogelio Moreno won Nikon's Small World Photomicrography contest, but his photo was just one of many dazzling shots.

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DEKRA Purchases NDT, PI And Microscopic Operations From DNV GL

2014-08-11 08:14:37| chemicalonline News Articles

The international expert organisation DEKRA has taken over the Plant Integrity (PI), Non Destructive Testing (NDT) and Microsopy operations from DNV GL (formerly KEMA) and as such is expanding its industrial operations inthe Netherlands. A respective purchase agreement was signed by DEKRA and DNV GL on 8thofAugust 2014

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Materials Testing Device continuously observes microscopic events.

2014-06-04 14:30:31| Industrial Newsroom - All News for Today

Enabling observation of microscopic events in real-time, FlexRHINO DynaMat helps engineers and researchers understand processes leading to material weakening and failure. Device uses continuous monitoring (high spatio-temporal dynamics) technology, works with virtually any crystalline material, and captures microscopic damage, prior to total failure, occurring at relatively ordinary loads and stress conditions. Use of optical technology provides temperature, pressure, and chemical resistance. This story is related to the following:Deformation Testers |

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Some microscopic marine organisms could adapt to climate change

2013-03-28 09:27:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed

Planet Earth: Certain tiny, ocean-dwelling creatures called foraminifera can survive in conditions similar to those caused by ocean acidification, say scientists. Elphidium excavatum The researchers, from Plymouth University and the National Autonomous University of Mexico, found the first evidence that some foraminifera can handle very low-pH conditions near seafloor vents in the Gulf of California. Carbon dioxide bubbles up through these vents, lowering the pH of the surrounding seawater and mimicking conditions...

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