In 2004 Jan Huisken of the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics and colleagues published
a paper establishing structured plane illumination microscopy, or SPIM, and the field has been booming ever since.
Not exact matches
Their
paper, published online today in the Journal of Archaeological Science,
establishes that when the body is deprived of vitamin D, permanent microscopic abnormalities form in the layers of dentin, the tooth
structure under the enamel, creating an ongoing record that can later be read like the rings of a tree.
Due to this, we have
established sophisticated and professional Proofreading and Quality Department which checks every academic
paper for its
structure, formatting, grammar, style and foremost originality.
The likes of Jo Baer, Donald Judd, Mel Bochner, and Larry Poons were not familiar with the professional uses of graph
paper as a way to more directly envision objects and
structures, by circumventing
established (and deceptive) conventions of perspectival representation.
The final part of the
paper also identifies a series of issues that are important to consider in
establishing a National Indigenous Representative Body, such as the guiding principles, role and functions,
structure and membership, its relationship with governments and parliaments and, of course, funding for such a body.