New Frontiers in Elemental Bioimaging
Bioimaging has advanced incredibly in the past few years. Not so long ago, techniques such as laser ablation ICP-MS (LA-ICP-MS) took hours or even days to build relatively low resolution elemental distribution images of geological samples. Now, instrument and software advances have enabled amazingly detailed, high resolution LA-ICP-MS images of a range of geological and biological samples to be produced in minutes. At the same time, optical imaging techniques have also advanced, enabling visualisation, investigation and interpretation of sample data in ways that were impossible just a few years ago.
If you would like to discover how these bioimaging advances can benefit your research, then join us at the London Metallomics Facility's New Frontiers in Elemental Bioimaging workshop on Friday 19th July! This event, hosted in collaboration with the Nikon Imaging Centre and Centre for Ultrastructural Imaging, is being held at New Hunts House, on Kings College London's Guy's Campus, located close to London's iconic Shard building.
To find out more about this workshop and to register for it, head to: https://www.kcl.ac.uk/events/new-frontiers-in-elemental-bioimaging