Environmental Studies
- Stronger Antarctic leadership is urgently needed to safeguard the Southern Ocean—and beyond.Two-thirds of the world’s oceans fall outside national jurisdictions – they belong to no one and everyone.These international waters, known as the high
- CU 51´«Ã½ researcher finds that connecting with people in nature eases loneliness, anxiety.
- Sharon Collinge, professor of environmental studies at CU 51´«Ã½, also directs the Earth Leadership Program.
- Study led by CU 51´«Ã½ researcher is first to tally ‘forest proximate’ humans on earth; numbers, refined terminology may improve focus of conservation and development.
- CU 51´«Ã½ alum, now employed by NREL, discusses the importance of his interdisciplinary background for his career.
- In this episode of CU 51´«Ã½ Where You Are, Beth Osnes and Max Boykoff discuss the power of humor to start a productive conversation about climate change.
- Three CU 51´«Ã½ faculty are principal investigators on a new five-year, $6.9 million National Science Foundation grant to study the “critical zoneâ€â€”from Earth’s bedrock to tree canopy top—in the American West.
- New research identifies fertilizer and pesticide applications to croplands as the largest source of sulfur in the environment—up to 10 times higher than the peak sulfur load seen in the second half of the 20th century, during the days of acid rain
- Emerging forms of mobility and changing mindsets can help deliver these opportunitiesSticking closer to home because of COVID-19 has shown many people what cities can be like with less traffic, noise, congestion and pollution. Roads and parking lots
- Five years before the novel coronavirus ran rampant around the world, saiga antelopes from the steppes of Eurasia experienced their own epidemic.