News

Congratulations to the 2025 College of Sciences Distinguished Alumni Award winners.
Liming, a centuries-old agricultural practice, can improve crop yield and greenhouse gas reduction.
The new center will promote research and collaboration focused on using state-of-the-art artificial intelligence and machine learning techniques to address complex scientific challenges.
Experts say that more accurate depictions of sharks can help protect them and highlight their role in global ecosystems.
The interdisciplinary program provides an in-depth look at how science is communicated to the public, how policy shapes research, and how science communication affects society.

Events

Seminars are held on Thursdays from 11:00 AM-12:00 PM (except where noted) virtually or in the Charles H. Jones Auditorium (L1205) in the Ford ES&T Building. For more information, please contact the Main Office at (404) 894-3893 or the speaker host (listed below).

Organizers: Ali Sarhadi, Shi Sim, and Nisaa Buchanan

Come join the Spatial Ecology and Paleontology Lab for Fossil Fridays! Become a fossil hunter and help discover how vertebrate communities have changed through time.

The College of Sciences will host a full day of career-focused engagement featuring Southern Company, one of the nation’s premier energy providers.

Lightning Megaflashes, Superbolts, and the Extremes of Lightning

This interactive networking-style event is designed to help College of Sciences majors practice their pitch and better communicate their skills to employers

Experts in the News

Harnessing the Oceans for Climate Solutions

During an episode of the podcast “Carbon Conversations,” Annalisa Bracco, professor in the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, discusses her work and how computation tools can help us better understand the ocean, marine ecosystems, and climate dynamics.

Carbon Conversations

Long-distance Reefs May Be Key to Coral Recovery From Bleaching in Moorea and Tahiti

Researchers, including Annalisa Bracco, professor in the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, used modeling to demonstrate that the quick recovery of bleached corals in the past five mass bleaching events in Moorea and Tahiti (within the Society Islands of French Polynesia) may be the result of long-distance connectivity with the Tuamotu Islands and undisturbed coral reefs within a 300 km radius.

National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science News

Airborne Lead and Chlorine Levels Soared as L.A. Wildfires Raged

Wildfires are becoming a bigger focus for scientists that study air pollution, said Nga Lee (Sally) Ng, professor in the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. Ng is also the principal investigator of ASCENT, a new federally funded, national monitoring network that began last year to measure a wide range of air pollutants in real time. The readings from the Los Angeles area fires were captured at the network’s monitoring station in Pico Rivera, several miles from the active fires.

The New York Times
 

 

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