UCL in the media
Drug resistance hampers fight against tuberculosis
Professor Ali Zumla (UCL Infection & Immunity) co-authors new research on drug resistant TB.
Read at Reuters. Additional coverage: PA, The GuardianTurning knowledge into the new oil
Professor Michael Worton (Vice Provost International) on UCL's plans to establish Qatari campus UCL-Q.
Read on BBC News Online.An aria for Italy's unity also sounds like an elegy
Professor John Foot (UCL Italian) comments on Italy's political future.
Read at the International Herald Tribune.'Life depends on science but the arts make it worth living'
Professor John Martin (UCL Medicine) on the relationship between the arts and the sciences.
Read at Times Higher Education.World's first tissue-engineered urethras hailed success
Professor Chris Mason (UCL Biochemical Engineering) comments on the world's first tissue-engineered urethras.
Read at BBC News Online. Additional coverage: Associated Press, ReutersHow I got to know thunder thighs, the dinosaur with a fearsome kick
Dr Mike Taylor (UCL Earth Sciences) on the 'thunder-thighs' dinosaur discovery and the scientific process.
Read at the Guardian.Call over doctors performance gap
Dr Katherine Woolf (UCL Medical Education) leads new UCL research published in the British Medical Journal.
Read at the Press Association. Additional coverage: Daily Telegraph, BBC Asian NetworkHome of dodo pelvises and quagga bones spreads its wings - New Scientist
Famous as a jam-packed Victorian curiosity box, the Grant Museum moved from its most recent home in the Biology Department at UCL to more spacious lodgings.
Read.Leading UCL researchers celebrate women's contribution to science
Eminent female UCL researchers have featured in Suffrage Science: a collection of interviews and stories about the significant contributions that women have made to science over the past 100 years. Coverage also in
the Guardian. ReadInstitute of Archaeology sheds light on animal use 12,000 years ago
Research led by UCL archaeologists has found that the first farmers in Asia and Europe exploited animals in very different ways, and that climate and environmental change affected the appearance of the first domesticated animals.
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