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Until recently, there hasn’t been a great way of assessing groundwater storage, or understanding how climate change is impacting it.
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A new study from University of Colorado Boulder researchers finds a strong chance that precipitation will make the next two decades on the Colorado River wetter than the last.
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Once considered the Mountain West's apex predator, a rise in hunting over the last 200 years has lead to a heavy decline in the mountain lion population.
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When humans debate climate policy, the questions asked are often posed in terms of what will work best. Fairness isn’t always, or even often, taken into account. Stacia Ryder thinks that needs to change.
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The Science Management Policy Exchange conference in Moab places scientists and policy makers in a single convention for environmental discussion.
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UPR hosted an event Tuesday with Bridgerland Audubon Society and Grow the Flow called “Is Great Salt Lake a Person?” bringing 90 community members to Logan's Cache Bar.
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Ultra-processed food and the companies that produce them contribute to the epidemic in diabetes, cancer, dementia, and other chronic disease. Is it time to regulate these products like tobacco?
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Dendrochronologists found that high temperatures in the 21st century make the current drought unprecedented compared to other dry periods around the Colorado River across the past 500 years.
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Memory is not a rigid, static picture of what came before. Rather, it’s a nebulous, ever-changing conceptualization of who we were, what we believed, what happened to us, and what was happening around us.
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Many films and conversations at this year's Sundance Film Festival explored the role of artificial intelligence, including prize-winning feature film, "Love Me."
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Nearly 400 members of the medical community in Utah and across the U.S. delivered a letter to policymakers urging them to save the declining Great Salt Lake.
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A Sundance Film Festival documentary titled "Nocturnes" focuses on the work of moth researchers in India and brings an auditory experience to viewers.