Cafe Science Dundee - Heads or Tails - How do Baby animals develop?

Activity: Other activity typesPublic engagement and outreach - public lecture/debate/seminar

Description

Our bodies and those of other animals are CLS-06.05.11_0225.jpegremarkably complex and yet all start off as a single cell. So how then do animals develop structures including limbs, backbones, heads and in some cases tails?

Development biology seeks to understand how a single fertilised egg develops into the exquisite fully formed baby where everything forms at the right time and in the right place. We’ve discovered that this process is controlled by just a handful of molecules that communicate between cells.

This talk from Dr Kim Dale, University of Dundee, will explore two areas of baby development in the womb: how to build a skeleton and how cells decide to become different tissues, such as muscle or bone.

Join us at Avery & Co, 34 South Tay Street, Dundee on Monday 14th March 2016, at 7pm. This is a free event and everyone is welcome. There is no need to book in advance but arrive early to avoid disappointment.
Period14 Mar 2016
Event titleCafe Science Dundee
Event typeOther
SponsorsUniversity of Dundee, Dundee Science Centre, Abertay University
LocationDundee, United KingdomShow on map
Degree of RecognitionLocal

Keywords

  • developmental biology