Climate & Environment
The College of Communication, Media, Design and Information's Water Desk has expanded the services it offers to resource-starved reporters who need help covering complex stories around the Colorado River and climate change.
Research from CU Âé¶¹Ó°Ôº environmental economist Grant Webster finds that wildfire risk mitigation and proactive evacuation preparation are complementary.
First-of-its-kind study assesses how health benefits of aggressive climate policy travel across international borders.- Researchers at the McMurdo Dry Valleys Long-Term Ecological Research Program have spent more than three decades studying ecosystems in one of the world’s most hostile environments.
Off the west coast of Australia, some seawater has lost nearly a third of its salty area in recent decades, as climate change-related current shifts push more fresh water into the region.
A new paper from Irina Overeem and Ethan Pierce describes how icebergs export Greenlandic sediment into the Arctic Ocean—and how that process might change in the future.
For CU Âé¶¹Ó°Ôº ecology and evolutionary biology alum Emma Vogel, an award-winning photo captured a vital moment of research and science.- New research reveals that "introverted" animals that don't live in stable social groups may be more vulnerable to extinction.
CU Âé¶¹Ó°Ôº researcher Twila Moon shares what is at stake as President Trump bids for Greenland.
A sediment record millions of years old revealed that the tropical Andes heated up dramatically when atmospheric CO2 levels were similar to today’s.