Spring 2008 – 10th Anniversary Edition
Research: Persistent Explosives Present a Problem
Introduction During winter and spring of 2008 I had the opportunity to participate in the Women in Science Project (WISP) internship program for first-year students. As an intern in the Biochemical Sciences branch at the Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory (CRREL), I conducted research in the laboratory of Dave...
/ Spring 2008 - 10th Anniversary Edition
Battle of the Sexes
In the summer of 1925, Russian geneticist Sergey Gershenson collected 19 female fruit flies of the species Drosophila obscura from a forest near Moscow. He brought the captured flies back to his laboratory and mated them with normal males to study their offspring. By the second generation of matings, Gershenson...
/ Spring 2008 - 10th Anniversary Edition
Remembering Karen Wetterhahn
On June 8, 1997, the Dartmouth community suffered a tragic loss: the death of Karen Wetterhahn, a beloved professor. A specialist in metal toxicology, Wetterhahn had spent over 20 years in the Chemistry Department elucidating the mechanisms of chromium and nickel metabolism in cells. In August of 1996, while following...
/ Spring 2008 - 10th Anniversary Edition
The Future of Science at Dartmouth and Around the World
As the Dartmouth Undergraduate Journal of Science celebrates its tenth year, scientists from all over the world continue to chip away at the unknown. Slowly but surely, we are learning more about the myriad components that comprise our universe, from the very small to the very large, and from the...
/ Spring 2008 - 10th Anniversary Edition
A Celebration of the Legacy of Physics at Dartmouth
In 1769, Reverend Eleazar Wheelock founded Dartmouth, the ninth college in the nation. In 1998, four daring, inspired Dartmouth undergraduates established the DUJS. What else has happened?
/ Spring 2008 - 10th Anniversary Edition
A Decade of Science at Dartmouth
During the ten years of the DUJS’s existence, science at Dartmouth has seen breakthrough after breakthrough. Once the site of the first clinical x-ray in North America, Dartmouth College over the last decade has had a hand in the discovery of microRNA and cancer chemoprevention, and its researchers have worked...
/ Spring 2008 - 10th Anniversary Edition
Ten Years of the DUJS
We propose a medium of scientific expression for the students, by the students. The community needs a medium that will focus on recognizing and unifying Dartmouth undergraduate research while also, motivating more students to get involved in the advancement of scientific thought. We need some entity to become the source...
/ Spring 2008 - 10th Anniversary Edition
Philistines! (Scene Two)
Philistines! (Scene Two) Or the Electrodynamics of a Moving Body Nasser is a Senior Fellow at the College. Each Senior Fellow completes an independent, interdisciplinary project in lieu of taking classes or finishing a major. His project ‘Playing with Science’ is advised by faculty from the Theater, History, and Physics...
/ Spring 2008 - 10th Anniversary Edition
Research: Army Ant Emigration
Diel Emigration and Foraging Behaviors of the Army Ant Eciton hamatum (Subfamily Ecitoninae) As predators of many social insects and larger arthropods, army ants are a key component of tropical forest ecosystems. Specifically, their foraging behaviors and food preferences can affect forest invertebrate abundance and composition. To better understand army...
/ Spring 2008 - 10th Anniversary Edition
Current Issue: Winter 2013
Recent
Popular
The Physiology of Stress: Cortisol and the Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis
The Threats of Overfishing: Consequences at the Commercial Level
Oil Spills: Severity and Consequences to Our Ecosystem
Risk and Resilience in Children Coping with Parental Divorce
The Mammalian Diving Reflex
You Are What You Eat: How Food Affects Your Mood
A Royal Shame: Prince Leopold’s Hemophilia and Its Effect on Medical Research
Turning to Nanotechnology for Pollution Control: Applications of Nanoparticles
Esophageal Cancer and the ‘Asian Glow’
Eutrophication in the Gulf of Mexico: How Midwestern farming practices are creating a ‘Dead Zone’















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