I Haritina Mogoșanu, AbSciCon, International Participation, posters, 0 Two of two submitted posters for AbSciCon 2015 are at the conference! These are the SBNZ 2015 poster and SBNZ 2015 Education Poster. You can watch the conference streaming live here!
@SETI Talks: Professor Kathleen Campbell Kathleen Campbell, Earth, extreme environments, International Participation, life, life in extreme environments, life origins, Mars, New Zealand, SETI, 0 "ET life would simply be ... logical..."
+ a – May – zing! The Space & Science Festival is back! I Haritina Mogoșanu, NASA, space science festival, SSF, 0 The Space & Science Festival is back for 2017! Now with three amazing events across three weekends in the...
+ New astrobiology group formed I Haritina Mogoșanu, astrobiology, RASNZ, 0 A new group of the Royal Astronomical Society (RASNZ) has been established to foster the local astrobiology community. The Astrobiology...
+ Introduction to Astrobotany Caitlin MacArthur, astrobotany, botany, growing plants in space, iss, jaxa, kibo, plant biology, plants in space, seeds in space, seeds in space 2021, 0 Can we really grow potatoes on Mars like astronaut Mark Watney (Matt Damon) does in "The Martian"?
+ Dr Seth Shostak, speaker at the Astrobiology Australasia Meeting 2018 I Haritina Mogoșanu, AAM2018, astrobiology, featured, Seth Shostak, 0 Dr. Seth Shostak
+ Hans Huybrighs, Max Planck Institute and European Space Agency (ESA) I Haritina Mogoșanu, European Space Agency; Europa; Jupiter; Max Plank;, 0 Hans Huybrighs from Max Plank Institute is visiting Wellington. He will give a talk for the New Zealand Astrobiology...
+ Announcement for the Astrobiology Australasia Meeting and Grand Tour 2018 NZAN Science, AAM2018, conference, education, 0 Please join us ‘down under’ for one, the other, or both events in mid-year 2018 Event 1 - Astrobiology Australasia...
+ New Zealand’s hot springs contribute to discovery of oldest evidence for life on land! NZAN Science, featured, hot springs, Mars, Professor Kathy Campbell, University of Auckland, 1 Life might have colonised land 580 million years earlier than previously thought - and this has also implications for...