News
- The University of Colorado’s Department of Theatre & Dance begins its 2017-18 season with a weekend of onscreen dance from all over the world.
- A team of ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ scientists is working to unlock a longstanding ecological mystery: barren patches of ground in Africa's grasslands known as fairy circles.
- Caterpillars have far less bacteria and fungi inhabiting their guts than other organisms, making them an evolutionary oddity in the animal kingdom.
- Tremendous amounts of soot following a massive asteroid strike 66 million years ago would have plunged Earth into darkness for nearly two years, according to a news release from NCAR.
- Hundreds of cyclists will take to the road on Sept. 10 to raise money for scholarships at the University of Colorado Boulder.
- For humans, our sense of touch is relayed to the brain via small electrical pulses. But new research shows that individual bacteria can feel their external environment in a similar way.
- A new study uncovers surprising similarities in the ways that multicellular organisms fold their DNA.
- Ancient DNA used to track the exodus of Pueblo people from Colorado's Mesa Verde region in the late 13th century indicates many wound up in the northern Rio Grande area of New Mexico.
- ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ program helps underserved and underrepresented students in the STEM fields gain valuable research experience for graduate school.
- Until he participated in the Scripps National Spelling Bee in Washington, D.C., in May, Niwot’s Ben Lenger, 12, and his family didn’t realize that such competitions are virtually unknown in countries where English is not spoken.