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The Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences (GELIFES - https://www.rug.nl/research/gelifes/ ) offers a 4-year M20 Program funded PhD position for a project on “Multi-dimensional
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evergreen and most herbaceous plants so the understanding of this diversification is crucial. Working with a team from Spain (led by Prof. Mario Martínez Azorín, Alicante) and the UK you will generate DNA
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Open Science. Sharing science, shaping tomorrow. A computational MSc degree in biology, chemistry, or physics. Proven affinity with evolutionary theory. Willingness to work in Groningen and Utrecht
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bacteria and plant. Project description We are hiring a PhD candidate to join our ERC-funded team on chronomicrobiology, a new field that bridges microbiology and chronobiology. The MicroClock program
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PhD position - Modelling the emergence of information transfer in prebiotic self-replicating systems
research, inspiring education, and Open Science. Sharing science, shaping tomorrow. A computational MSc degree in biology, chemistry, or physics. Proven affinity with evolutionary theory. Willingness to work
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, analytical chemistry, plant physiology, genetics, ecology, evolutionary biology, bioinformatics, and mathematics and computer science. All our projects are highly integrative and require willingness to closely
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-class expertise from eight Dutch Universities, five Research Institutes and relevant societal stakeholders that play a major role in research and management of the North Sea. The six-year program (2025
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Job Description A PhD position focusing on structural and functional characterization of ciliary protein complexes derived from human cells is available in the research group of Assistant Prof
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values change over time and subject to which factors phylogenetic analyses of evolutionary trajectories across cultures Main supervisor will be Prof. Dr. Andrea Bender (UiB); co-supervision will be
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will combine state-of-the-art computer vision, modeling and archived specimens to determine biotic and abiotic factors driving spatial variation in molt phenology. It will use museum genomics to recover