...bucket-list winter vacation to Alaska for 30 years, and he couldn't have picked a better time to take it.The retired chemist from Jesup, Ga., didn't mind that February temperatures can hover near minus 40 degrees on the outskirts of Fairbanks...
...full range of comprehensive employee benefits. JOB DESCRIPTION: Environmental professionals (Environmental Engineer, Chemist, Hydrogeologist, Geologist, or Environmental Scientist) to provide on-site base wide program and project management support...
...investigation in Alaska involving Ecstasy, the prosecutors said. Ecstasy is one of the so-called ''club drugs'' concocted by underground chemists and commonly used by young people at nightclubs, concerts and all-night dance parties.
...things went to custard instead of falling apart, I pushed a trundler rather than a cart around the grocery store, went to a chemist instead of a drug store, put petrol in my car, watched rugby not football, and went tramping rather than hiking. Daily...
...played by a perpetually worried Adrien Brody and a perpetually oblivious Sarah Polley, respectively, are genetic bio-chemists, searching for potentially lifesaving and lucrative new chemical compounds in the blood and tissue of animals. Unique animals...
...on the World Wide Web. Photo by M. Scott Moon As a potter, Libby Berezin has a broad skill set. She?s an artist and a chemist. She?s in sales, and she could start a moving company with the amount of clay she lifts and carries. Thirty years into...
...about what needs to be done to protect Alaska, and how that might be relevant to the Gulf. Jeffrey Short, a retired research chemist who studied oil impacts for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said not enough was known about the Arctic...
...would like to challenge the developers to really develop something. How about challenging our brightest and most talented chemist and physicist to find a chemical solution to the problem, no pun intended. Find some solution at the atom level to change...
...which can feed a lot of hares, which in turn stimulates a lot of papyriferic acid scaling on the birch twigs. Bryant and UAF chemist Tom Clausen have proposed that birch with its papyriferic acid and other compounds may have potential medical applications...
...had concentrated PCPs at about 370 parts per million and DDTs at about 470 parts per million in its tissues, according to chemist Gina Ylitalo, of the National Marine Fisheries Service's contaminants lab in Seattle. Another transient male from the Gulf...
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