Nestled in the Uinta Mountains of northern Utah, a series of pristine lakes are facing a new threat—humans. Geography professor and chair Katrina Moser led a team of researchers in the region this summer to better understand how human activity, like agriculture and warming temperatures because of cl...
Read Also
- Scientists synthesize a prebiotic carrier assists regorafenib in treating colorectal cancer
- Researchers uncover cause of a rapidly changing remote water system
- Preparing the LHC and its injector complex for the 2024 lead-ion run
- Image: Burning Man festival observed from space
- Lucid Gravity: range, charging, price, release date, and more
- The best Garmin watches for training and everyday life
- Team develops gene editing strategy for macroalgae Neopyropia
- Here's what a TV show based on Untitled Goose Game could have been like
- Calling a restaurant? You might be speaking with an AI host
- Research highlights the unseen challenges, adaptations of adult daughters during COVID upheaval for families
Latest phys
- Scientists synthesize a prebiotic carrier assists regorafenib in treating colorectal cancer
- Researchers uncover cause of a rapidly changing remote water system
- Preparing the LHC and its injector complex for the 2024 lead-ion run
- Image: Burning Man festival observed from space
- Team develops gene editing strategy for macroalgae Neopyropia
- Research highlights the unseen challenges, adaptations of adult daughters during COVID upheaval for families
- Q&A: Public opinion research in changing times
- Scientists study how to increase water, nutrient-use efficiency in greenhouses, nurseries
- Hubble lights the way with new multiwavelength view of galaxy NGC 1559
- Genome sequence analysis identifies new driver of antimicrobial resistance