Newsletter
- Dr. Morteza Karimzadeh, assistant professor of Geography at CU Boulder and his collaborators at the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) and CU Denver’s Department of Computer Science were recently awarded a three-year $1.2M
- Interested in learning about the rapidly changing Arctic and its implications on ecosystems, climate, and the global economy? Polar scientist and CU Distinguished Professor Mark Serreze has just released a three-course
- Department NewsBabs Buttenfield Awarded Distinguished Teaching Honors Congratulations to Babs Buttenfield on receiving the American Association of Geographers (AAG) Distinguished Teaching Honors for her career-long
- Teaching, and learning remotely during the pandemic is not easy—from dropped zoom calls and spotty internet, to feeling disconnected from classmates and course material. But this fall, one class managed to combat feelings
- I’ve been asked to reflect on my efforts to build a GIS curriculum here at CU-Boulder. When I arrived on campus in January 1996, there wasn’t an actual curriculum in place, just a single GIS class offered intermittently by part
- Professor Guofeng CaoDr. Guofeng Cao received a $265,058 funding support from National Science Foundation for the project proposal "Deep Learning in Geospatial Uncertainty Modeling''. With this support, Guofeng will develop new
- I am a geographic information scientist with broad training in geography, statistics, computer science and earth sciences. Prior to joining CU, I spent several years teaching in the Department of Geosciences at Texas Tech
- Last, but not least, a few kudos and announcements from current and former students:Many congratulations CU Geography alum Andrew Linke, currently Assistant Professor of Geography at the University of Utah, for winning the
- Arctic sea ice likely reached its maximum extent for the year, at 14.78 million square kilometers (5.71 million square miles) on March 13, 2019, according to scientists at the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC)