News archive

Enterrament perinatal íber i imatge microscòpica línia neonatal dental

Microscopic study of milk teeth reveals mystery of death of Iberian culture newborns buried inside homes

A UAB study in collaboration with the UVic-UCC and the ALBA synchrotron concludes that the Iberian culture (8th to 1st centuries BCE) newborns buried within domestic spaces died of natural causes, such as complications during labour or premature births, and not due to ritual practices. Researchers applied an innovative methodology, based on the study of the neonatal line of baby teeth using optic microscopy and microflourescence with synchrotron light, to analyse the teeth from 45 infant skeletal remains and precisely identified the moments of both birth and death.

Joan Trunto

One of the world's top defenders of the ethics of care and democracy to visit the UAB

Joan C. Tronto, emeritus professor of the City University of New York and the University of Minnesota and one of the greatest exponents of the ethics of care and democracy, will visit the UAB and offer a conference at the Rectorat building on 10 October. The conference will be open to all members of the community and will focus on the revolutionary potential of a care democracy.

Cromosomes

Researchers explain the organization of DNA in chromosomes from repetitive interactions between nucleosomes

An article by UAB professor Joan-Ramon Daban analyzes in depth the physical problems associated with DNA packaging that have often been neglected in structural models of chromosomes. The study published in the journal Small Structures demonstrates that the multilaminar organization of DNA, proposed from previous experimental research carried out at the UAB, is fully compatible with the structural and functional properties of chromosomes. This organization can be explained by weak interactions between nucleosomes, which are the repetitive blocks that fold the DNA double helix.

Pep Canadell: "If we do not become global citizens, we will not solve climate change"

Pep Canadell, executive director of Global Carbon Project (GCP) and chief research scientist at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), offered a conference on 27 June entitled "Is global warming accelerating and are we in time to stop it at 1.5, 2 or 3°C?", organised by the faculties of Biosciences and Science and CREAF.

Pep Canadell, director del Global Carbon Project.

"Is global warming accelerating? Are we in time to stop it at 1.5, 2 or 3°C?"

Pep Canadell, executive director of the Global Carbon Project (GCP) and head of research at the Australian National Science Agency (CSIRO), will give a lecture entitled "Is global warming accelerating and are we in time to stop it at 1.5, 2 or 3°C?". The conference will take place on Thursday 27 June at 1 p.m., in the auditorium of the Faculties of Science and Biosciences. The conference has been organised by the UAB and CREAF, of which Canadell is, respectively, alumnus and scientific advisor, and is open to the general public.

Visites al Campus Online T4

The Campus visits YouTube version are back!

Laura Pierola and Víctor Rodríguez star in the fourth season of the UAB campus tours "Racons Amagats", a video series that brings UABers closer to discovering interesting places and services that you might not yet know exist.