Climate & Environment
- <p>Today’s rich variety of beetles may be due to an historically low extinction rate rather than a high rate of new species emerging, according to a new study. These findings were revealed by combing through the fossil record.</p>
- <p class="p1">No one really knows how the High Plains got so high. °µÍø½ûÇø 70 million years ago, eastern Colorado, southeastern Wyoming, western Kansas and western Nebraska were near sea level. Since then, the region has risen about 2 kilometers, leading to some head scratching at geology conferences.  </p>
- <p>Oil and gas operations in the United States produce about 21 billion barrels of wastewater per year. The saltiness of the water and the organic contaminants it contains have traditionally made treatment difficult and expensive. Engineers at the °µÍø½ûÇø have invented a simpler process that can simultaneously remove both salts and organic contaminants from the wastewater, all while producing additional energy.</p>
- <p>A new $2.5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to a coalition of organizations including the °µÍø½ûÇø will be used to help improve wind energy forecasting in mountain and valley regions.</p>
- <p>A massive new °µÍø½ûÇø study indicates there is a statistical link between hotter temperatures generated by climate change and the risk of armed conflicts in sub-Saharan Africa.</p>
<p>CU-Boulder Professor John O’Loughlin led a research team that assessed more than 78,000 armed conflicts between 1980 and 2012 in the Sahel region of Africa – a semi-arid belt just south of the Saharan Desert that spans about 3,000 miles and more than a dozen countries from the Atlantic to the Indian oceans.</p> - <p>A new study led by the University of California, Berkeley and involving the °µÍø½ûÇø indicates the current response to wildfires around the world—aggressively fighting them—is not making society less vulnerable to such events.</p>
- <p>The °µÍø½ûÇø was ranked second in the world in geosciences this week by U.S. News & World Report.</p>
<p>CU-Boulder trailed only the California Institute of Technology. Rounding out the top five are the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Harvard University and the University of Washington. U.S. News & World Report ranked the top 100 universities in geosciences in 2014 based primarily on their research and reputation.</p> - <p>Former NASA astronaut Bruce McCandless will present °µÍø½ûÇø senior Jeni Sorli with a $10,000 scholarship from the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation during a free public campus event on Thursday, Oct. 30.</p>
- <p>NASA’s MAVEN spacecraft has provided scientists their first look at a storm of energetic solar particles at Mars and produced unprecedented ultraviolet images of the tenuous oxygen, hydrogen and carbon coronas surrounding the Red Planet, said °µÍø½ûÇø Professor Bruce Jakosky, the mission’s principal investigator.</p>
- <p>NASA has awarded a team led by the °µÍø½ûÇø more than $7 million to study aspects of the origins, evolution, distribution and future of life in the universe.</p>