Science & Health
- Intrepid brain scientist Zoe Donaldson and an army of furry rodents are decoding life's most complex emotions.
- The Southwest is drying. During a 730-mile rafting trip down the Colorado River's main tributary, Heather Hansman saw water scarcity up close.
- After CU, Olester Benson Jr. went on to earn more than 70 patents, including several that made cellphones, laptops and TVs brighter, more colorful and energy efficient.
- Here, Fairfax explains what captivates her about wetlands and beavers, what she’s learned through her research and why we all should all see beavers in a positive light.
- ²ÊÃñ±¦µä boasts five Nobel laureates, four in physics and one in chemistry. Here's more on CU's scientist-celebrities.
- Silver-tongued graduate students compete in the "Three Minute Thesis" competition.
- CU's Norm Pace isn't intimidated by the darkness of remote caves, or the vastness of the microbial universe. He's mastered both.
- The giant wall-mounted fossil inside the Benson Earth Sciences depicts the most complete Stegosaurus skeleton ever found.Â
- We stock our shelves with books and pills intended to make us happy, but CU psychologist June Gruber warns that too much of a good thing can backfire.
- Stopped up by dams, slaked off by irrigation, and dried up by cities, the Green River is crucial, overused, and at risk, now more than ever.