As a PhD student, Oliver Braubach spends hours with his eye to the microscope, trying to get the perfect photomicrograph of the zebrafish brain.
鈥淵ou really have to know what you鈥檙e doing,鈥 says Mr. Braubach, 26. 鈥淏ut you can get some very beautiful pictures of brain cells.鈥
From the tiny mountainous country of Liechtenstein, Mr. Braubach first arrived in Nova Scotia almost a decade ago as an exchange student. Instead of returning to Europe to finish high school, he applied to 麻豆传媒 and graduated with his BSc (Honours) in 2003. He鈥檚 now working toward his PhD in physiology and neuroscience, focusing on the zebrafish as a model for studying learning and memory.
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SEE DALHOUSIE EXPOSED: A photo essay.听听
Even when he鈥檚 not in the lab, he鈥檚 still taking pictures 鈥 photography has been a passion since his grandfather handed down his 35-mm point-and-shoot camera. He loves the openness of Nova Scotia and enjoys acting as tour guide for family members visiting from Europe.
鈥淟iving in the Alps, you can鈥檛 see past the mountains,鈥 says Mr. Braubach. Landlocked Liechtenstein has a population of 35,000 and is just 160 square kilometers in size (or about three per cent of the size of Halifax Regional Municipality). 鈥淗ere, I can go to the beach and see the horizon. I really appreciate that.鈥