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- [anchors selector="#content h3" title="Updates from Alumni:" /]Gina Li (MA, 2019)In June 2019, Gina Li will be starting a job as a Geospatial Data Engineer at Descartes Labs in San Francisco, CA. Headquartered in
- 鈥淵ou can't laugh and be afraid at the same time. If you're laughing, I defy you to be afraid,鈥 Stephen Colbert, TV talk show hostIt was July 2006 in Kabul, Afghanistan, where tensions between locals and international armed forces were rising beyond
- Are you a junior or senior Geography major concentrating in GIScience, which includes GIS, Remote Sensing, Spatial Analysis, or Cartography? Planning to pursue a career in one of these areas? You could win a $5,
- The American Association of Geographers annual meeting was held April 3-7, 2019, in Washington, DC. The conference hosted nearly 8,500 geographers, GIS specialists, environmental scientists, and other registrants from around the
- The Undergrad Snow Internship Program has been hosting undergraduates at the CU Mountain Research Station for over 20 years and includes alumni like Jen Morse and Noah Molotch, who help run the program today. The long-term data
- Geography course enrollment is now open for Fall 2019! Many exciting Geography courses are available to you from our areas of focus: General GeographyPhysical GeographyEnvironment-SocietyHuman
- Geography course enrollment is now open for Summer 2019! Exciting Geography courses are available to you: World Regional GeographyMountain GeographyIntroduction to Global Public HealthMigration, Immigrant
- As the Arctic warms faster than the rest of the globe, permafrost, land ice and sea ice are disappearing at unprecedented rates. And these changes not only affect the infrastructure, economies and cultures of the Arctic, they have significant
- Collaboration and community were at the heart of the Geography department鈥檚 first Graduate Student Forum held on Saturday January 26th. The forum was organized by Graduate Director Jennifer Fluri, Graduate Program Assistant Karen
- Sometime in the late afternoon, I joined the crowd that had gathered before the Bear totem, a one-ton, nine-foot piece of a coastal fir delivered by truck from Washington State. The day before, about a dozen of us lifted the