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News archive for Faculty of Science and Technology

Marie Curie Actions provide researchers with stepping stones of new research opportunities.
Focusing on the wealth of information gleaned from the recent Fennoscandian Arctic Russia - Drilling Early Earth Project (FAR-DEEP), 鈥淩eading the Archive of Earth鈥檚 Oxygenation鈥 is a veritable atlas for current knowledge of a literally life-changing period in Earth鈥檚 history.
2013 has begun, and so have the studies of two CGB students in our PhD programme. We are pleased to welcome Jan Vander Roost and Sven Le Moine Bauer to Bergen and to our team.
Small chemical groups are commonly attached to proteins in order to control their function. In eukaryotic cells, N-terminal acetyltransferases (NATs) attach acetyl groups to the very first amino acid (the N-terminus) of a majority of proteins. Now, researchers at MBI (UiB) and VIB-Gent have discovered that NATs also carry out other types of protein modifications.
Recent research indicate that there may be a link between contaminants in food-stuff and the explosion in metabolic diseases, incl. type 2 diabetes, in the western world.
The team from University of Bergen was the best norwegian team during the North Western European Regional Programming Contest in Delft, November 23 - 25.
The best learning environment prize for 2012 at the University of Bergen is awarded to the Department of Informatics.
Hilde Kristin Grung-Berle will defend her master thesis Tuesday 11th December 2012. Her thesis is entitled: "Characterization of the transcription factor NF-E2p18/MafK as a nuclear phosphoinositide effector protein"
CGB researcher Dr. Romain Meyer joins IODP vessel JOIDES Resolution to explore evolution and formation of deep oceanic crust
Report from Earth Science Women's Network (ESWN) workshop on networking and communication skills.
Master thesis title: "Heterogeneous Ribonucleoprotein U interacts with Phosphoinositides"
Names and university affiliation of the members in the different committees are available here
Welcome to Rhian Morgan who has started as a PhD student October 8th 2012.
Researchers now know that the Gulf Stream is not only driven from the south, but also drawn northward by Arctic winds.
A multidisciplinary team of researchers at the Centre for Geobiology (CGB) have published their findings about how the geochemicial stratification in seafloor sediments correlates with stratification within microbial communities also found there.

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