Positions available: Postdocs, PhD students and Lab technician


The Plachta Group has positions available for enthusiastic postdoctoral researchers, PhD students, honours students and research technicians. Applicants with background in molecular and cell biology, biological imaging, developmental biology, stem cell biology and biophysics are especially encouraged to apply.

Dr Nicholas Plachta is relocating in 2011 from the California Institute of Technology to establish a research group as part of the EMBL Australia Partner Laboratory Network at the Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute (ARMI) based at Monash University.

Those interested can contact Dr Plachta at nico@caltech.edu for details.

Further information about the Plachta group is available at:
www.armi.org.au/Research1/Research_Groups/Plachta_Group.aspx



More News

  • 11.05.12 Support our young scientists, says EMBL Australia to McKeon Review
    EMBL Australia has made a submission to the McKeon strategic review of health and medical research in Australia.
  • 10.05.12 International training opportunities for PhD students
    EMBL Australia has opened two new travel grants for PhD students worth up to $7500 to attend conferences, short courses or laboratory training at one of the European Molecular Biology Laboratory’s (EMBL) five sites in Europe.
  • 13.03.12 Melbourne wins conference on future biology
    The cellular-wide impact of cancer; how pests interact with wheat plants; what characteristics of yeast give wine its taste. These are the sorts of complicated questions scientists from around the world will come to Melbourne in 2014 to discuss at the 15th International Conference on Systems Biology (ICSB 2014). Systems biology uses all the tools of the biological and computer science revolutions to look at whole plants and animals. Over the next decade it is set to transform biology.
  • 13.03.12 A new international initiative to understand life
    Australian scientists will collaborate with a pioneering Japanese group in systems biology research. – a new field of science that bridges biology and computer science to understand how whole organisms – plants, animals, bacteria, people – work.
  • 01.08.11 Bioinformatics for the Future - an update Aug 2011
    An update to Dr Ewan Birney's Report "Bioinformatics for the Future - 2009".
Related Organisations | 
© 2010 EMBL Australia | Contact Us | Sitemap
web design by Mintleaf Studio