| Frogfish Frogfishes, family Antennariidae, are a type of anglerfish in the order Lophiiformes. They are known as anglerfishes in Australia, as 'frogfish' actually refers to a different type of fish there. Frogfishes are found in almost all tropical and subtropical oceans and seas around the world, the primary exception being the Mediterranean Sea. Frogfish
|
| Crater Bay Crater Bay is a bay located in the Ushishir Islands, which are part of the Kuril Islands, in the Russian Far East. This bay was formed by volcano which is now extinct.The Russian Far East generates much revenue from tourism at Crater Bay. The Kuril islands have several volcanoes. Crater_Bay
|
| Cobalt green Cobalt green, also sometimes known as Rinman's green or Zinc Green, is a translucent green pigment made by mixing cobalt(II) oxide and zinc oxide and heating. It was invented by Swedish chemist Sven Rinman in 1780. Although it is stable and can be safely mixed with other pigments, it is rarely used because it is a weak pigment for its cost. Cobalt_green
|
| John Medina This article is about the modern-day molecular biologist. For the seventeenth century artist, see John Baptist Medina. John J. Medina is a developmental molecular biologist with special research interests in the isolation and characterization of genes involved in human brain development and the genetics of psychiatric disorders. John_Medina
|
| Ravi Desai Ravi Desai was an executive and Harvard graduate accused by various companies, most notably TheStreet.com, of inappropriate and deceitful behavior in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Desai may have been a native of Ithaca, NY.In 1996, Desai was the founding Editor in Chief who became the CEO of TheStreet.com, a post he held for 4 months before being fired by Jim Cramer for myriad reasons, including drinking on the job, falsifying business agreements, and blackmail. Ravi_Desai
|
| Warren G. Magnuson Health Sciences Building The Warren G. Magnuson Health Sciences Building is part of the University of Washington in Seattle, Washington and the world's largest single university building with a total floor area of Warren_G._Magnuson_Health_Sciences_Building
|
| Yoky Matsuoka Yoky Matsuoka (born c. 1972) is an associate professor of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Washington (U.W.), director of that university's Neurobotics Laboratory, and a 2007 MacArthur Fellow. Her research combines neuroscience and robotics--sometimes referred to by Matsuoka by the portmanteau "neurobotics"--to create more realistic prosthetics.An example of her work is a lifelike robotic hand, modeled bone-by-bone from a human hand, with multiple motors each corresponding to muscles and with strings playing the role of tendons along each digit. Yoky_Matsuoka
|
| Kynamatrix Research Network kynamatrix Research Network is a nonprofit network of researchers dedicated to the scientific understanding and advancement of interactive communication. One of the programs includes a project called "ResearcHDiscovery," launched in April 2007 Carnegie Mellon University, Georgia Institute of Technology, Harvard University, MIT Media Lab, Stanford University, and University of Washington. Kynamatrix_Research_Network
|
| Bionic contact lens Bionic contact lens is being developed to provide a virtual display that could have a variety of uses from assisting the visually impaired to the video game industry. The device will have the form of a conventional contact lens with added bionics technology. Bionic_contact_lens
|
| National Register of Historic Places listings in Pierce County, Washington List of entries on the National Register of Historic Places in Pierce County, WashingtonSee also National Register of Historic Places listings in Washington National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Pierce_County,_Washington
|
| Nihon Go Gakko (Tacoma) The , in what was then Tacoma, Washington's Japantown, was one of 24 Japanese language schools that existed in Washington prior to World War II. Nihon_Go_Gakko_(Tacoma)
|
| Psychedelic frogfish The psychedelic frogfish, Histiophryne psychedelica, is a yellow-brown or peach colored frogfish named for its psychedelic pink and white stripes arranged in a fingerprint pattern. The fish is from the waters near Ambon Island and Bali, Indonesia. Psychedelic_frogfish
|
| Steven Gabbe Steven G. Gabbe is an American medical researcher, specializing in complications of pregnancy. As of 2008, he is the dean of the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. Steven_Gabbe
|
| Articles for deletion/Log/2008 April 7 Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Log/2008_April_7
|
| Articles for deletion/Steven Gabbe Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Steven_Gabbe
|
| Foldit Foldit is an experimental video game about protein folding, developed as a collaboration between the University of Washington's departments of Computer Science and Engineering and Biochemistry (many of the same people who created Rosetta@home). The first public beta was released in May 2008.Foldit provides a series of tutorials in which the user manipulates simple protein-like structures, and a periodically updated set of puzzles based on real proteins. Foldit
|
| Brownleeite Brownleeite, chemical formula MnSi, was discovered by researchers of the Johnson Space Center in Houston while analyzing the Pi Puppid particle shower of the comet 26P/Grigg-Skjellerup. Brownleeite
|
| Donald E. Brownlee Don Brownlee is a professor of astronomy at the University of Washington (Seattle) and the principal investigator for NASA's STARDUST mission . His primary research interests include astrobiology, comets, and cosmic dust. Donald_E._Brownlee
|
| Seattle/Archive 5 Talk:Seattle/Archive_5
|
| Akoop User:Akoop
|