-
Until recently, there hasn’t been a great way of assessing groundwater storage, or understanding how climate change is impacting it.
-
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.
-
Recent large-scale fires that have consumed entire communities in the wildland-urban interface are a result of human-built structures rather than wildfires, according to new research published in the scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
-
Avalanche danger in the Utah mountains has been high this year. Listen to hear what a ski patroller and a physicist can teach us about why avalanches happen and how to stay safe on the slopes.
-
The Great Salt Lake Strike Team, gave an update this month on their work to get more water into the shrinking lake, highlighting a need for a multi-year approach.
-
Bobcats and other carnivores can remove over 95% of chronic wasting disease prions from infected meat, according to early findings.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
A chemist explains radioactivity at Utah State University's Science Unwrapped.
-
Almost all large organizations — from government entities to universities to private businesses — engage in sexual harassment prevention training. And yet the problem persists.
-
A study from Intermountain compared hospitalizations for heart attacks and unstable chest pain during wildfire season and winter inversions.