Cracking the genetic code of our cities: researchers around the world aim to map the urban genome
Sofia Ahsanuddin, Ebrahim Afshinnekoo and Christopher E. Mason
Microbiology Australia
37(4) 194 - 197
Published: 03 November 2016
Abstract
It is rare to say that one has lived through a revolution, but we are all living through one right now. High-throughput sequencing technologies have become cheaper and more cost-effective over the past decade, moving even faster than Moore’s Law for computer power (doubling every 18 months). Because sequencers are modern-day 'molecular microscopes', scientists believe that we are currently experiencing a scientific revolution similar to the one sparked by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek’s invention of the world’s first light microscope in the 17th century.https://doi.org/10.1071/MA16064
© CSIRO 2016