Physics professor Robert Davies and former student Jacob Alder share climate concerns on 'surreal' trip with Walking Softer By Jeff Hunter
Physics professor Robert Davies and former student Jacob Alder share climate concerns on 'surreal' trip with Walking Softer By Jeff Hunter
Carbon farming has garnered increasing attention as a way to reduce carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. By Ethan Brightbill By locking
When Daniella Hirschfeld led workshops last year that brought together community planners, engineers, and policymakers to focus on adapting to
The desiccation of Great Salt Lake is obvious, particularly from the air. The shoreline of the western world’s largest saline
If plants were a bit more ambulatory, Peter Adler and Michael Stemkovski might find their work to be a bit
Rustling leaves followed by the satisfying snap of an apple popping off a branch. That is the sound of Utah
Two decades of western drought have slowly drained Lake Powell, revealing canyons and petroglyphs not seen since the 1960s when
“Drink more water” is the phrase Marie Owens’s children say they’ll carve into her headstone. And while Owens admits she gives
Let’s be blunt: the outlook isn’t rosy. For more than two decades trends for above-normal temperatures and below-normal rainfall have
Brian Steed ’97, M.A. ’00, the inaugural executive director of the new Janet Quinney Lawson Institute of Land, Water and