538 Search Results
Forschungsgruppenleiterin Anna L. Ahlers in der FAZ über den Aufstieg der Wissenschaft in China
Zum ArtikelAnna L. Ahlers featured in FAZ on China's rise in the global system of science
Go to Article (in German)Constructing Scientific Communities: Citizen Science in the C19th and C21st
When Darwin was developing his theories of evolution he read avidly in popular natural history magazines and sought out information from an army of al
„Can we trust Chinese Covid-19 science?“ MPIWG-Wissenschaftlerinnen in Observer-Artikel zitiert
Zum Artikel"Can we trust Chinese Covid-19 science?" MPIWG scholars quoted in Observer article by Laura Spinney
Go to ArticleAgricultural Modernization and Biodiversity Conservation in the Twentieth Century
Helen Curry's research investigated the history of seed banking as a global conservation practice. Through this project, she sought to understand how
Death’s Paperwork: Gender, Authority, and Memory in Early Modern Science
I propose to consider the posthumous handling of the papers of seventeenth-century British naturalists and medical practitioners. When a naturalist di
Bodies in Paper: Popular Health Manuals and the Representation of Anatomy, 1890–1930
Starting in the last decade of the nineteenth century, paper models of the human body became a common consumer object affordable even to better-off wo
Cataloging Life
Species catalogs—printed or digital—are a specific form of encyclopedias and compendia. They are designed for different purposes, and "are among the m
Nature’s Imprint: Botanical Illustration between Northern Europe and the New World (1550–1750)
Jaya Remond's research project studies the production of botanical illustrations depicting "exotic" plants in early modern Northern Europe (1550–1750)