
"Someone once told me a Velociraptor was found frozen in ice in Russia. Is this true?"
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Astrobiologist Discusses Her Highly Cited Work in Astrochemistry

An analysis of publications in astrochemistry by Science Watch reveals that the work of astrobiologist Pascale Ehrenfreund of George Washington University’s Space Policy Institute is highly cited in other publications. It ranks at #5 by total cites, #6 by papers, and #5 by cites per paper. Her record in this analysis includes 20 papers cited a total of 445 times. Three of these papers are on the list of the 20 most-cited papers over the past decade, and one is on the list of the 20 most-cited papers over the past two years. She discusses her own work and the future of her field in the Science Watch article.
Source: [Science Watch]
- Life is Lonely at the Center of the Earth
- Measuring the Weight of Ancient Air
- Life Without the Sun
- Mirror-Image Clues to Life's Origins
- NASA Selects New Science Teams for Astrobiology Institute
- “Little Bang” triggered Solar System formation
- NASA Mars Lander Sees Falling Snow, Soil Data Suggest Liquid Past
- XV International Conference on the Origin of Life – a Personal Perspective
- New 2008 NASA Astrobiology Roadmap Available
- Diving for the Moon
