UCL in the media
Home 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 »Ê¼Ò»ªÈË 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
.Institute 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.
UCL's Grant Museum of Zoology to reopen - Wired UK
The Grant Museum, which contains some of the rarest extinct animal specimens in the world, is to re-open on 15 March, 2011.
UCL to lead planetary life mission - The Press Association
Dr Giovanna Tinetti (UCL Space & Planetary Sciences) leads £400 million Exoplanet Characterisation Observatory (EChO) mission, backed by the European Space Agency (ESA).
Spot the silent killer: Ovarian cancer symptoms - The Sydney Morning Herald
Professor Ian Jacobs (UCL Institute for Women's Health) discusses the difficulty in spotting ovarian cancer symptoms.
New Commentaries: Response to the Policy Exchange on the ECtHR
Dr Başak Çalı and Professor Richard Bellamy reject key arguments of the report 'Bringing Rights Home: Making human rights compatible with parliamentary democracy' by Michael Pinto-Duschinsky.
Pain reduced by changing what you look at - BBC News
Professor Patrick Haggard (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience) explains his new research which suggests that looking at your body can reduce pain.
A thousand ways online to put London on the map - Evening Standard
Researchers from the UCL Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis on using the latest technologies to map London.
Earliest human skull-cups used by Ice Age Britons
Simon Parfitt (UCL Institute of Archaeology) has contributed to research by the Natural History Museum published in journal PLoS ONE revealing the earliest known examples of human skull-cups in the world.