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Globally, heatwaves are becoming more frequent and intense. Led by an international team, an analysis of extreme heat trends since 1979 reveals changes in their area, movement speed, and temperature.
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Predators like coyotes and foxes, as well as other disturbances, drove the pelicans away. One scientist suspects the birds coming back to the island are too young to be aware of the predators.
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Why are there more species in some parts of the world and fewer in others? A team of researchers at Utah State University is investigating this ecological question.
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Autism Spectrum Disorder exists on a continuum of behaviors, capabilities, and deviations from norms — and for a very long time, that spectrum didn't include much space for girls.
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We visited the captivating tropical forest of Panama's Barro Colorado Island to learn about USU research into the astounding diversity of chemicals plants produce.
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A chemist explains radioactivity at Utah State University's Science Unwrapped.
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Almost all large organizations — from government entities to universities to private businesses — engage in sexual harassment prevention training. And yet the problem persists.
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A study from Intermountain compared hospitalizations for heart attacks and unstable chest pain during wildfire season and winter inversions.
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SDL's AWE mission is scheduled to launch on Thursday evening and will be mounted on the International Space Station
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Mosquito expert Michele Rehbein explains how last year's record-breaking winter impacted mosquito populations in Utah, as well as what to expect this winter.
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The recent disaster in Maui was the deadliest U.S. wildfire in more than a century, and it has highlighted a gaping hole in the country's disaster response.
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A USU Plants, Soils and Climate professor was recently awarded a major USDA grant to study plant-growth bacteria in increasingly high-salt and drought conditions.