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Facilities and Equipment Multi-user molecular and microbiological facilitiesIn the north wing of the biology department, several adjoining rooms serve as a core resource for the full-spectrum of technologies needed in molecular biology and microbiology. These include…
Imaging and MicroscopyOur Imaging Center (238 sq ft) houses a UVP Imaging Station for the capture and analysis of UV and chemi-luminescent signals from blots and gels. The center also houses a conventional Biotex luminescence plate reader and a Biotex fluorescent plate reader. The suite also has a dark room. The space occupied by the dark room is ideal for placement of a standard fluorescent or a confocal microscope. Our department is also equipped with a full range of teaching and research microscopes located throughout the laboratories. Visualization technology includes…
Tissue Culture FacilityA 200 sq foot room on the third floor of Marram Hall contains all the necessary equipment to perform mammalian tissue culture.
Other biology facilitiesAn area on the north end of Marram 3rd floor formerly housed an animal facility. The area consists of a suite of four rooms consisting of a total space of 642 sq ft currently used for storage, but could easily be re-converted back to an animal facility. The smaller three rooms could be used as animal housing areas. The larger L-shaped room could be transformed into a small surgical area, storage area for food, bedding and extra cages, a dirty area/cleaning station, and an atrium entry. Also, the equipment below is used for teaching, but are available for research as well.
Tropical GreenhouseA large greenhouse is found at the south end of the third floor of Marram Hall and is 36’ x 26’ with ceiling from 28’(east side) sloping up to 35’ (west side) tall. The greenhouse contains a tropical plant collection including over 300 Anthurium and Syngonium species as well as many other plants. Each year a number of specimens are added from an extensive Missouri Botanical Garden collection. The living collections are used for both teaching and research. Student use of the plants for genetic and systematic study is strongly encouraged. On-Campus Prairie and Wetland Restoration SiteAn 11 acre (5 ha) ecosystem restoration is adjacent to the north side of campus along the southern edge of a wetland of the Little Calumet River. Starting from only about 10 plant species after an Army Corps of Engineers flood berm construction, the current plant species richness is high at about 150 species with about 100 native species. The site is maintained by numerous native plantings, diligent attention by the IU Northwest community as well as controlled burns typically conducted in the spring. Other IU Northwest campus facilities available to biology students and facultyShared equipment to be purchased with a Northwest Center of Research Excellence Earmark grant:
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