Climate & Environment
- The new international annual review of the world’s climate showed that 2023 was the warmest year on record. A ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® Boulder scientist weighs in on how the rising global greenhouse gas concentration is driving climate change and what we can do.
- In July, Denver and the northern Front Range failed to meet the national air quality standards for ozone amid a nine-day streak of ozone pollution alerts. Lindsey Anderson, a ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® Boulder atmospheric chemist, offers her perspective on why this is important.
- Decades after his voyage on the HMS Beagle, Charles Darwin became fascinated by why plants move as they grow—spinning and twisting into corkscrews. Now, more than 150 years later, a new study may have solved the riddle.
- Establishing Key Biodiversity Areas in the Southern Ocean will be vital for safeguarding the ecosystem from the impact of human activities, ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® Boulder researchers say.
- New research by ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® Boulder doctoral student Grant Webster finds that the free-fare public transit initiative didn’t reduce ground-level ozone but may have other benefits.
- Geologists Lizzy Trower and Carl Simpson have won $1 million in support from the W.M. Keck Foundation to try to solve an evolutionary puzzle and extend Earth’s temperature record by 2 billion years.
- ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® researchers are taking part in a national project to identify sources of urban air pollution. The data will contribute to research related to both health and climate.
- ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® Boulder chemist Lauren Magliozzi shares her findings from the devastating Marshall Fire, detailing the fire's impact on aquatic ecosystems.
- A new ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® Boulder study has found disproportionate effects of temperature shifts on an icy glacier layer.
- Extreme weather is straining the country’s aging power grid from Texas to ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® and California. Kyri Baker, who studies infrastructure, offers her perspective on what the grid of the future could look like.