
Dyna Rochmyaningsih
Articles
-
Nov 7, 2024 |
geneticliteracyproject.org | Dyna Rochmyaningsih
Dyna Rochmyaningsih | Templeton Ideas | November 7, 2024 Cyanobacteria appears in the form of blue-green algae, most commonly. Credit: MV Times A story about the origins of life in the cosmos starts at Earth’s equator, where Dian Fiantis, a professor of soil science at Andalas University in Indonesia, investigated how seemingly dead environments come back to life. In 2018, she traveled to Mt. Anak Krakatoa (which emerged after the famous Krakatoa’s eruption) to collect the volcanic ash it...
-
Oct 25, 2024 |
science.org | Dyna Rochmyaningsih
Last month, Shoaib Ahmed Malik, a chemical engineer–turned–theologian, took up a new position at the University of Edinburgh’s School of Divinity, making him one of the few Muslim scholars of religion and science based at a university in Europe or the United States. One of his first projects was moving a trove of classic Islamic texts into his office. Now, he’s ready to use them to inform his studies of the perspective that the faith can bring to contemporary science issues.
-
Oct 15, 2024 |
templeton.org | Dyna Rochmyaningsih
A story about the origins of life in the cosmos starts at Earth’s equator, where Dian Fiantis, a professor of soil science at Andalas University in Indonesia, investigated how seemingly dead environments come back to life. In 2018, she traveled to Mt. Anak Krakatoa (which emerged after the famous Krakatoa’s eruption) to collect the volcanic ash it ejected two months before.
-
Sep 5, 2024 |
news.mongabay.com | Dyna Rochmyaningsih
By the end of this year, exporters of products derived from palm oil and six other agricultural commodities to Europe will be required to comply with the newly enacted EU Regulation on Deforestation Free Products, or EUDR. The law requires exporters to prove the commodities were not produced on recently deforested land, and that their supply chains are free of human rights abuses and environmental violations.
-
Aug 7, 2024 |
nature.com | Dyna Rochmyaningsih
Palaeontologists in Thailand have identified one of the first tyrannosauroid fossils in southeast Asia1. The discovery has excited researchers because so few specimens from the Late Jurassic epoch, around 150 million years ago, have been found in the region, in part owing to a lack of resources. Palaeontological research in many southeast Asian countries is often led and funded by foreign institutions, say scientists from the region.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →