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AGU, the world's largest Earth and space science association, celebrates individuals and teams through its annual Honors and Recognition program for their accomplishments in research, education, science communication, and
The Environmental Data Science Innovation and Impact Lab (ESIIL),Ìýa next-generation NSF synthesis center directed by Geography Professor Jennifer Balch, hosted its third annual Innovation Summit this September, bringing
Ìý My path to becoming an Assistant Professor at the Geography department started in Colombia, where I studied environmental engineering and anthropology. After working in a malaria surveillance and
In August 2025,ÌýEllen Considine started as an Assistant Professor of Geography and a Fellow of CIRES (the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences). She is also a faculty affiliate of the new Public Health
Science communication has long been a passion of mine, and I am so grateful to have the opportunity to share a bit of my work, my perspective on glacier retreat and its environmental and sociocultural impacts with Seth at the Denver Gazette. While
Anshul Rai Sharma is a PhD student in the Department of Geography advised by Yaffa Truelove. His research follows how people navigate precarious housing conditions in one of India's fastest-growing cities, Bengaluru.Supported by the John Pitlick
Intake pipe for Colorado River water. The Colorado River provides 70% of water supplies to most of the CA 48th District. ÌýSuzanne Till (Michel), PhD ’00, has built a career at the intersection of geography,
Roberto Garza (PhD ’80) has built a remarkable career shaped by a lifelong passion for geography, geology, and the landscapes of the American Southwest. After earning his PhD from CU ¶¶Òõ´«Ã½ÔÚÏß, Roberto began a 28-year teaching
Geothermal test bore cuttings mark clean energy futures: Michelle Stewart, Ph.D. 2014, Executive Director of Western Resilience Center, with Matt Cooper, Founder/Owner of High Altitude Geothermal, and Paul Bony, Energy
The study, published in Scientific Reports, examines how rapid climate warming in Alaska is altering river conditions and threatening Chinook salmon populations that Indigenous communities have depended on for millennia.