Supply chain management in the maritime sector is currently bogged down by paper-based documentation, deliveries coordinated by phone and multiple…
A team of scientists from the National University of Singapore (NUS) has successfully identified the urinary biomarkers of an emerging…
Congratulations to a team of College of Humanities and Sciences (CHS) students who emerged as one of the champions in…
Today is Evolution day – a day commemorating the publication of Charles Darwin’s Origin of Species on 24 November 1859.
Science Safety Day 2022, with the theme of ‘Science Improves Lives, Safety Saves Lives’, was held on 16 November as…
Taking to the waters, Class of 2022 alumna Alena LIM, who majored in Statistics and minored in Economics, paddled her…
© National University of Singapore. All Rights Reserved.
“We have barely scratched the surface of Timor-Leste’s biodiversity. New discoveries can have profound impacts on conservation and policy-making.”
In August 2022, we led an expedition to Timor-Leste in collaboration with Conservation International and the government of Timor-Leste. The Museum’s herpetologist, Dr CHAN Kin Onn, discovered a new species of bent-toed gecko which was named Cyrtodactylus santana, in reference to the Nino Konis Santana National Park, in which the gecko was discovered.