Searching across hundreds of databases

Our searching services are busy right now. Please try again later

  • Register
X
Forgot Password

If you have forgotten your password you can enter your email here and get a temporary password sent to your email.

X

Leaving Community

Are you sure you want to leave this community? Leaving the community will revoke any permissions you have been granted in this community.

No
Yes
X
Forgot Password

If you have forgotten your password you can enter your email here and get a temporary password sent to your email.

Resource Name
James Hutton Institute; Scotland; United Kingdom
RRID:SCR_011324 RRID Copied      
PDF Report How to cite
James Hutton Institute; Scotland; United Kingdom (RRID:SCR_011324)
Copy Citation Copied
Resource Information

URL: http://www.hutton.ac.uk/

Proper Citation: James Hutton Institute; Scotland; United Kingdom (RRID:SCR_011324)

Description: Multi-disciplinary research organization with strengths in crops, soils, land & environmental research, studying food, energy & environmental sustainability in Aberdeen and Dundee, UK. The James Hutton Institute brings together the Macaulay Land Use Research Institute and SCRI (Scottish Crop Research Institute) both of which have illustrious histories. The new institute was created on 1 April 2011. The new organization will make major, new contributions to the understanding of key global issues, such as food, energy and environmental security, and developing and promoting effective technological and management solutions to these. The James Hutton Institute is an internationally networked organization and operates from multiple sites, including two main ones in Scotland at Aberdeen and Dundee. It employs more than 600 scientists and support staff, making it one of the biggest research centers in the UK and the first of its type in Europe. The institute is one of the Scottish Government''s main research providers in environmental, crop and food science and will have a major role in the Scottish knowledge economy. James Hutton (1726 1797) was a leading figure of the Scottish Enlightenment, an eighteenth century golden age of intellectual and scientific achievements centered on Edinburgh. He is internationally regarded as the founder of modern geology and one of the first scientists to describe the Earth as a living system. His thinking on natural selection influenced Charles Darwin in developing his theory of evolution.

Abbreviations: James Hutton Institute

Resource Type: institution

Expand All
This resource

is parent organization of

Tablet

is parent organization of

Arabidopsis Nucleolar Protein Database

Usage and Citation Metrics

We found {{ ctrl2.mentions.total_count }} mentions in open access literature.

We have not found any literature mentions for this resource.

We are searching literature mentions for this resource.

Most recent articles:

{{ mention._source.dc.creators[0].familyName }} {{ mention._source.dc.creators[0].initials }}, et al. ({{ mention._source.dc.publicationYear }}) {{ mention._source.dc.title }} {{ mention._source.dc.publishers[0].name }}, {{ mention._source.dc.publishers[0].volume }}({{ mention._source.dc.publishers[0].issue }}), {{ mention._source.dc.publishers[0].pagination }}. (PMID:{{ mention._id.replace('PMID:', '') }})

Checkfor all resource mentions.

Collaborator Network

A list of researchers who have used the resource and an author search tool

Find mentions based on location


{{ ctrl2.mentions.errors.location }}

A list of researchers who have used the resource and an author search tool. This is available for resources that have literature mentions.

Ratings and Alerts

No rating or validation information has been found for James Hutton Institute; Scotland; United Kingdom.

No alerts have been found for James Hutton Institute; Scotland; United Kingdom.

Data and Source Information