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Michelle Hämmerle wins Annual HEAS Photo Competition

Michelle Hämmerle - The photo is showing louse nits from the species Pediculus humanus americanus on the head of a 500-year old Inca mummy, from which we extracted both host louse DNA and DNA of the bacterium Bartonella quintana. The picture was taken using cross-polarized light at 400× magnification. 
Michelle Hämmerle – The photo is showing louse nits from the species Pediculus humanus americanus on the head of a 500-year old Inca mummy, from which we extracted both host louse DNA and DNA of the bacterium Bartonella quintana. The picture was taken using cross-polarized light at 400× magnification. 

HEAS Member Michelle Hämmerle, a PhD candidate in the Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, won the Annual HEAS Photo competition for her picture of louse nits from the species Pediculus humanus americanus on the head of a 500-year old Inca mummy. Michelle was presented with a €100 book voucher at the Gräzlfest, the HEAS Annual Meeting, by the Head of HEAS, Tom Higham. Other pictures from the competition can be seen in the gallery below.

 

 

 

 

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