News Headlines
- Glacial retreat in cold, high-altitude ecosystems exposes environments that are extremely sensitive to phosphorus input, new -led research shows.
- The Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade (OEDIT) and the Colorado Space Business Roundtable convened a forum at on May 17, 2018 to explore current investment challenges facing Colorado’s aerospace industry.
- CIRES’ Western Water Assessment has released a new usable science guide for researchers hoping for impact. The handbook provides tested, tangible methods for researchers to produce useful science for those who write legislation, implement policy, manage natural resources or public resources, or manage their own business—bridging the gap between critical scientific research and constructive societal impact.
- A new NOAA dataset of wind forecasts could help the energy industry identify which offshore areas in the United States have the best potential for wind resource development.
- The project, which is sponsored by Boulder County Public Health and led by researchers from ’s Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR) in partnership with the Colorado Department of Public Health and the Environment (CDPHE), installed the first automated system of its kind in the Rocky Mountain region that provides valuable real-time information through hourly postings on a public website for residents and policymakers alike.
- Cheap natural gas prices and the increasing availability of wind energy are pummeling the coal industry more than regulation, according to a new economic analysis from and North Carolina State University.
- Professor Elspeth Dusinberre will deliver the 112th Distinguished Research Lecture at on Tuesday, May 1, at 4 p.m. in the University Memorial Center’s Glenn Miller Ballroom. Her talk is titled “Archaeology, Imperialism and What it Means to Be Human.”
- Comfortable and confident on stage with a panel of judges on one side and hundreds of eager faces in the audience, Steven Dourmashkin tapped the brightly colored plastic rings on his hand against spots of color on his T-Shirt. With each tap, a new tone rang out.
- CIRES, NOAA, , and NIST scientists revamped and “ruggedized” Nobel Prize laser technology—turning a complex, room-sized collection of instruments into a sleek, 19-inch portable unit to tote into the field near oil and gas operations.
- This Earth Day weekend, over 100 students from 20+ U.S. states, including Alaska and Hawaii, will chart their course to the , to match wits in the National Ocean Sciences Bowl.