Home The Latest News The Latest News Read the latest news about our breakthrough discoveries, get a behind-the-scenes looks at our researchers at work, and join our scientists as they redefine the pursuit of what's possible. Search search Search Clear All Research Area Astronomy & Astrophysics Earth Science Global Ecology Genetics & Developmental Biology Matter at Extreme States Planetary Science Plant Science Type Organizational News Science News Campus News Trustee News Awards Feature Story Q&A Event Highlights Spotlight Year Book #Carnegie125 Division Biosphere Sciences & Engineering Embryology Global Ecology Plant Biology Carnegie Administration Earth & Planets Laboratory Observatories Sort by Date Ascending Date Descending Filter By: Clear All Type Organizational News Science News Campus News Trustee News Awards Feature Story Q&A Event Highlights Spotlight Year Book #Carnegie125 Research Area Astronomy & Astrophysics Earth Science Global Ecology Genetics & Developmental Biology Matter at Extreme States Planetary Science Plant Science Division Biosphere Sciences & Engineering Embryology Global Ecology Plant Biology Carnegie Administration Earth & Planets Laboratory Observatories Sort by Date Ascending Date Descending Filter results 132 results found for: December 11, 2024 Could we engineer stability in the microbiome? New research opens the door September 30, 2024 Awards Service to Science Award Winner Lynne Hugendubler: Supporting Life in the Zheng Lab September 13, 2024 Organizational News Joseph Gall, father of modern cell biology, dead at 96 September 10, 2024 Awards Carnegie Science's Phillip Cleves key collaborator on newly launched Allen Discovery Center on Neurobiology in Changing Environments July 23, 2024 Q&A Meet Brittany Belin July 09, 2024 Organizational News Maxine Singer, renowned biologist and advocate for STEM inclusion, dies at 93 May 20, 2024 Awards Carnegie Science’s Emily Zakem awarded by Simons Foundation May 01, 2024 Awards Carnegie’s Arthur Grossman elected to National Academy of Sciences March 04, 2024 Science News Revealing the fruit fly digestive tract’s “command center” Nettie Marie Stevens is shown here looking through a microscope while studying at the Stazione Zoologica in Naples, Italy, in 1909. In 1904, soon after getting her Ph.D. in biology, Stevens was awarded a grant from Carnegie Science. Her 1905 paper “Studies in Spermatogenesis with Especial Reference to the Accessory Chromosome” produced some of the first work offering cytological evidence demonstrating that the X and Y chromosomes were associated with sex determination. Image Courtesy Bryn Mawr College Special Collections. March 01, 2024 Feature Story Nettie Stevens Biography Pagination Previous page chevron_left Page 1 Current page 2 Page 3 … Next page chevron_right
September 30, 2024 Awards Service to Science Award Winner Lynne Hugendubler: Supporting Life in the Zheng Lab
September 10, 2024 Awards Carnegie Science's Phillip Cleves key collaborator on newly launched Allen Discovery Center on Neurobiology in Changing Environments
July 09, 2024 Organizational News Maxine Singer, renowned biologist and advocate for STEM inclusion, dies at 93
Nettie Marie Stevens is shown here looking through a microscope while studying at the Stazione Zoologica in Naples, Italy, in 1909. In 1904, soon after getting her Ph.D. in biology, Stevens was awarded a grant from Carnegie Science. Her 1905 paper “Studies in Spermatogenesis with Especial Reference to the Accessory Chromosome” produced some of the first work offering cytological evidence demonstrating that the X and Y chromosomes were associated with sex determination. Image Courtesy Bryn Mawr College Special Collections. March 01, 2024 Feature Story Nettie Stevens Biography