Jennifer Newton
@foggnewton
Mcfc fan who likes cooking, gardening, science, words and equality. Newsletter & research editor @ChemistryWorld. she/her
ID: 223969915
07-12-2010 20:27:55
1,1K Tweet
936 Followers
3,3K Following
My son's school isn't celebrating #WorldBookDay till tomorrow but he had great fun making his very own Baxter so he can be Darkus from M. G. Leonard's Beetle Boy
Delighted to share my take on how we can use microorganisms to create a more sustainable future for us and future generations. Enjoy! Biological Sciences | University of Edinburgh Centre for Engineering Biology How Synthetic Biology Will Help Us Build a Sustainable Future | Stephen ... youtu.be/5QErqEo27M8 via YouTube
Come spend 8 weeks working with the Chemistry World team as a science writer. Job advert 👇 careers-rsc.icims.com/jobs/3221/scie…
Hello Chem Tweeps! Jennifer Newton here to give you the lowdown on yesterday’s Re:action newsletter. It featured Crispr for abiotic polymers, cyclocarbons, nuclear fuel bottlenecks, techno-science and gas-station heroin. Subscribe to never miss an iteration! chemistryworld.com/sign-up-to-rea…
If you want a simple way to stay up to date with the week’s most important (and interesting) chemistry stories from across the internet, sign up to Re:action – a free newsletter expertly curated by Chemistry World’s editorial team. Sign up now: bit.ly/3HWfJf1
Come spend 8 weeks working with the Chemistry World team as a science writer. Job advert 👇 careers-rsc.icims.com/jobs/3391/scie…
It’s hard not to love an element as special as carbon – but might chemists’ adoration be a problem? Researchers have arguably been spending too much time dreaming what the future may hold for the element. New article at Chemistry World, w/ Ashok Keerthi chemistryworld.com/news/carbons-a…
There have been 20 Aprils since Chemistry World began! In this video, Jennifer Newton walks us through some of the best covers from past Aprils, including ones focused on the beauty of experiments, preserving Henry VIII's flagship, and the weirdest versions of the periodic table.
The -ome family of terms has gained a new member, writes Jennifer Newton. Microplastome joins genome, proteome, exposome and other research domains that unpick complex biological systems by considering them as collective entities of molecules and interactions. chemistryworld.com/opinion/meet-t…