The sadness of feuilleton novels
August 1, 2010 12:00 amMarlyse Meyer was an outstanding thinker of Brazilian culture
Marlyse Meyer was an outstanding thinker of Brazilian culture
The physicist presents his project of scientific kits for children
Attacking undesirable veins and arteries could fight cancer and blindness
Poor technical know-how made it difficult to set up a new industry in Brazil
Freedom to create knowledge
Project to take mathematics research progress into the classroom
Academics propose ways to put forest assets to better use
Summary of the first 10 years of Biota-FAPESP published in Science
Nature highlights São Paulo's autonomy and the strength of its production
Aid for publications finances translations and encourages publishing houses
USP and Unicamp discuss how to increase the impact of their research
Fatty acids revert inflammation that unleashes obesity and diabetes
Neurons present chemical dysfunction linked to brain development
Population density influences life span of termites
Ancient ocean that isolated the Amazon dried up 520 million years ago
Interaction of water with rocks facilitated the formation of amethysts
New theory helps explain the behavior of ions diluted in water
Company develops a battery for electric vehicles and solar and wind systems
Itaipu Binacional produces electric vehicles in a partnership with Fiat
Coppe builds a vehicle driven by hydrogen and batteries
First stent produced in Brazil to correct narrowed arteries has a market
Carbon nanotubes result in more versatile products
Analysis deconstructs the notion of the anthropologist as a translator
Census will reveal how many ethnic groups and languages exist in Brazil
Study states that essayist Nelson Rodrigues was "Brazil's Montaigne"
The professor from USP talks about the evolution of renal physiology in Brazil
Smartphone tested for collecting field data to feed online medical records
Using idle land could expand biofuel and food production
Reconciling exploitation and conservation brings groups together
Partnership between scientists and journalists are still far apart