15 chemistry-"University-of-Washington" Fellowship positions at University of British Columbia
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Academic Job Category Faculty Non Bargaining Job Title Postdoctoral Fellow- Synthetic Chemistry Department Research | Sammis Lab | Department of Chemistry | Faculty of Science (Glenn Sammis) Posting
-
, University of Washington); and Dr. Laura Schummers (ScD, Assistant Professor, UBC). Abortion access in Canada is inequitably distributed with wide urban-rural disparities. Introduction of the medication
-
(MD, MPH, Clinical Professor, UBC); Dr. Sarah Munro (PhD, Assistant Professor, University of Washington); and Dr. Laura Schummers (ScD, Assistant Professor, UBC). Abortion access in Canada is
-
Investigators are Dr. Bonnie Henry (MD, MPH, Clinical Professor, UBC); Dr. Sarah Munro (PhD, Assistant Professor, University of Washington); and Dr. Laura Schummers (ScD, Assistant Professor, UBC). Abortion
-
Academic Job Category Faculty Non Bargaining Job Title Postdoctoral Research Fellow Department UBCO | Faculty | Department of Chemistry | Irving K. Barber Faculty of Sciences (Susan Murch) Posting
-
candidates should also have the following: Qualifications: Ph.D. degree in electrochemistry, chemical science or materials science Proven experience working in an academic or industrial lab setting
-
. **Note: start dates may be flexible. Minimum qualifications: PhD in Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, or related discipline; Strong electrochemistry background (e.g., fuel cells, water electrolysis, etc
-
geochronology and/or radiogenic isotope geochemistry Experience in collection and interpretation of detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology data Expertise in mineralogy and mineral chemistry including use of scanning
-
in geochronology and/or radiogenic isotope geochemistry Experience in collection and interpretation of detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology data Expertise in mineralogy and mineral chemistry including
-
research excellence. It commemorates the contributions of Drs. Luise and Gerhard Herzberg to science. Dr. Gerhard Herzberg received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1971, "for his contributions