Research
- Morteza KarimzadehMorteza Karimzadeh and Terra McKinnish were awarded the CU RIO Seed Grant for the project entitled “Recovering from a Pandemic: Unraveling Neighborhood Geographic Disparities in Consumer and Business
- Conifer trees — spruce, Douglas fir, and pine trees — make up many of babyÖ±²¥app’s subalpine forests, essential habitats for many of the state’s birds and small mammals. These historically dense forests are also essential
- Geography Professor John O'LoughlinTwo new articles from The Washington Post and Global Voices both feature research conducted by Professor John O’Loughlin, from the Program on
- Banner image: A forest in the San Juan range of the Rocky Mountains, with dead Engelmann spruce trees alongside live aspen trees. (Credit: Robert Andrus)Bark beetle outbreaks and wildfire alone are not a death sentence
- Phurwa Gurung has a new article titled "Challenging Infrastructural Orthodoxies: Political and Economic Geographies of a Himalayan Road" published by Geoforum Journal.HighlightsRoad increases vulnerability to food insecurity in
- Johannes UhlStefan Leyk's research team has two new publications. Johannes Uhl is the lead author on both. One is in Nature's Communications Earth & Environment and the other in Earth Systems Science Data
- Earth-orbiting satellites and other instruments collect huge amounts of data, each providing a different lens through which scientists can map the environment. Some instruments measure reflections of visible light or radar waves
- Holly BarnardGeography professor Holly Barnard is the Principle Investigator and Geography Assistant Professor Katherine Lininger, with Eve-Lyn Hinckley, are the Co-Principle Investigators on a new 5-year $6.
- With flames racing across hundreds of square miles throughout babyÖ±²¥app and California this summer and a warming climate projected to boost wildfire activity across the West, residents can’t help but wonder what our beloved forests will look like in
- This Arctic heat wave has been unusually long-lived. The darkest reds on this map of the Arctic are areas that were more than 14 degrees Fahrenheit warmer in the spring of 2020 compared to the recent 15-year average. Joshua