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Showing 1–17 of 17 results
Advanced filters: Author: "Daniel Cressey" Clear advanced filters
  • A European show reveals new ways of thinking about energy, Daniel Cressey learns.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 473, P: 153
  • Daniel Cressey marvels at a gleaming depiction of the subatomic by the world's leading information designer.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 489, P: 207
  • Daniel Cressey reflects on a play that uses astronomy and medicine to probe what it means to see.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 483, P: 35
  • Daniel Cressey reviews five of the week's best science picks.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 519, P: 413
  • Daniel Cressey finds there is more to dirt than disease at a London exhibition.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 472, P: 293
  • Daniel Cressey views the British Library's first science exhibition — a celebration of scientific illustration.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 507, P: 304-305
  • Even the most prestigious art gallery has a few sham pictures in its collection, and scientific techniques are increasingly able to uncover them, as Daniel Cressey finds out.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 466, P: 34
  • Daniel Cressey tours scientists and artists who are showcasing elusive environmental shifts.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 497, P: 187
  • Daniel Cressey delves into a sceptics' history of monster hunters and their mythical quarry.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 499, P: 406
  • Daniel Cressey celebrates the pending refit of the Glass Lab — an innovative crossroads of science and art at MIT.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 505, P: 617
  • As the wild blue yonder beckons and labs and classrooms empty, Nature's regular reviewers share their holiday reads.

    • Callum Roberts
    • Ann Finkbeiner
    • Colin Sullivan
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 511, P: 152-154
  • Plunge into a profusion of brilliant summer reads suggested by regular reviewers and editors, far away from the lab and lecture hall.

    • Nathaniel Comfort
    • Kevin Padian
    • Sara Abdulla
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 523, P: 528-530
  • Explore the gory glories of forensic science, grapple with Tom Stoppard's take on consciousness, learn what it takes to live on Mars, re-enter Jurassic Park, dive into a coral reef and dally with Robert Oppenheimer. Daniel Cressey reports.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 517, P: 18-20
  • It promises to be a heady year for science in culture: fans can steep in the sumptuous world of colour, unpeel the upside of failure, explore neural pathways, revisit the First World War, mend a rip in space-time, go pterosaur-spotting and traverse a mammoth-ridden nation. Daniel Cressey investigates.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 505, P: 22-24
    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 455, P: 289
  • The Columbia–Princeton Electronic Music Center in New York was the first institution of its kind in the United States for experimenters seeking new technology-based sounds. Fifty years after its founding, director of research Doug Repetto explains how electronic music has evolved and how the role of academic music centres is changing.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 456, P: 576
  • Marek Kukula is public astronomer at London's Royal Observatory in Greenwich and the curator of Visions of the Universe, an exhibition charting the trajectory of celestial imaging, with a focus on astrophotography. On the eve of its opening, Kukula talks about eighteenth-century star maps and the co-evolution of the telescope and camera.

    • Daniel Cressey
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 497, P: 564