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EN_01281070_2144
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  • 40,00 EUR

    Strictly for editorial, single use on a personal (nonprofit) web site, Internet portal, social media (Facebook, Instagram etc.), blog for 1 year. Not for resale. Maximum picture size 2000px.

  • 75,00 EUR

    Strictly for editorial, single use on a commercial web site, Internet portal, social media (Facebook, Instagram etc.), blog for 1 year. Not for resale. Maximum picture size 2000px.

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Nobel prize winner Jeffrey C. Hall speaks with a visitor at his home in Cambridge, Maine, Monday, Oct. 2, 2017. Hall, along with Michael Rosbash and Michael W. Young, won the 9-million-kronor ($1.1 million) prize for their work on finding genetic mechanisms behind circadian rhythms, which adapt the workings of the body to different phases of the day, influencing sleep, behavior, hormone levels, body temperature and metabolism. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
arch30
2017-10-02
AP/EAST NEWS
Associated Press
AP
17275669528015
2,83MB
46cm x 31cm by 300dpi
1, 2, 2017, A, ADAPT, ALONG, AND, AP, AT, BEHAVIOR, BEHIND, BODY, BUKATY, C, CAMBRIDGE, CIRCADIAN, DAY, DIFFERENT, F, FINDING, FOR, GENETIC, HALL, HIS, HOME, HORMONE, IN, INFLUENCING, JEFFREY, LEVELS, MAINE, MECHANISMS, METABOLISM, MICHAEL, MILLION, MONDAY, NOBEL, OCT, OF, ON, PHASES, PRIZE, RHYTHMS, ROBERT, ROSBASH, SLEEP, SPEAKS, TEMPERATURE, THE, THEIR, TO, VISITOR, W, WHICH, WINNER, WITH, WON, WORK, WORKINGS, YOUNG,