Not exact matches
The published data are based on three
expeditions of the German
research vessel METEOR, which took place off Peru
between November 2012 and March 2013.
In order to solve this question, the team took samples from the seabed, from the boundary layer
between the seabed and seawater, as well as from different water layers in the tropical oxygen minimum zone during the
Expedition M92 with the German
research vessel METEOR in January 2013.
As part of their
research, the scientists collected 16 specimens of Macroscelides micus during nine
expeditions between 2005 and 2011.
Heady questions that are touched upon in this allegory of our era's heated struggle
between religion vs. science that so dominates many of our medical and scientific
research that could potentially save humanity (it's not a coincidence that the Icarus
expeditions have scientists, environmentalists and psychologists), if not for the fact that some of their methods are deemed morally reprehensible by people with devout beliefs.
Before 1950, Sir John Burton Cleland wrote one in every six articles about Indigenous health in the MJA, and was the most prominent doctor in salvaging Indigenous data for science.7 Professor of Pathology and Microbiology at the University of Adelaide, he joined annual anthropological
expeditions to Central Australia from 1925 to 1939 to collect these data, often describing the
expeditions in the MJA.18 Following European
research on the distribution of blood groups in different populations, 19 these
expeditions examined blood groups to provide precise scientific demarcations
between races, but contradictory evidence soon could not be ignored.