Clint Talbott
Mountain Research Station chief expands understanding of alpine environmentsBill Bowman on Niwot Ridge near the Continental Divide. A caption accompanying this picture on Bowman's web site says, "My field office - where work really gets done."Bill
Genes increasing risk for mental disorders should have been weeded out of the gene pool. Why haven’t they been?Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and other mental disorders usually appear by the time the sufferers are in their reproductive prime, and
Collaborating couple pursues next generation of lasersWhen the first functioning laser was unveiled in 1960, people had no idea it would be used for surgery, let alone in bar-code readers and CD players. Experts speculated that the new device might
They are instructive today, historian saysWorld War I shattered the people and the collective psyche of Great Britain, but the war’s end did not stop the strife or suffering. Between 1918 and 1931, the shell-shocked people and their nation sought to
Surprising similarities between divergent groups, but old stereotypes persist, researcher saysThough they express their sexuality in starkly different ways, evangelical Christian men and goth men share a startling amount of common ground in their “
The Cold War is history, and major nuclear powers are slashing their arsenals. No rational leader would start a nuclear war. And even if India and Pakistan traded a few nuclear bombs, conventional wisdom suggests, most of the world wouldn’t suffer
First was a riddle: Why did Maxentius, the last pagan emperor of Rome, never occupy his 80-acre villa outside the great city? Then came a different mystery, then evidence spawning new questions. A CU team leads the painstaking search for answers.
Leading thinkers and researchers at CU are helping society understand what we know about climate change, how well we know it, what the future might hold, and how the world should react.
After a stroke, Professor Ted Snow thought his career was over. But with the help of CU's Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Science, he has returned to teaching, and a full life.
When Mary Rippon stepped off the train in 1878, she proclaimed the university "glorious." She was right.