冈本视频

Faculty News

  • The National Geographic Society鈥檚 Committee for Research and Exploration has awarded Assistant Professor of Geography Mike Loranty a grant for his project 鈥淒isentangling Tree and Shrub Phenology in Siberian Taiga Ecosystems.鈥 The funding will cover Loranty鈥檚 travel to the Northeast Scientific Station in Chersky, Russia, where he will monitor the timing 鈥 or phenology 鈥 [鈥
    April 11, 2016
  • Corden steel sculpture by 冈本视频 Professor DeWitt Godfrey
    With varying styles, materials, and scales, the work of 冈本视频鈥檚 studio art professors has filled Clifford Gallery 鈥 giving visitors a glimpse at what they do outside of the classroom.
    April 6, 2016
  • Professor Tim McCay
    冈本视频鈥檚 Picker Interdisciplinary Science Institute continues its mission of supporting innovative research with four new grants for 2016. The special funding is designed to help bring together 冈本视频 faculty with outside researchers from around the world in an effort to open new areas of study, and to find creative ways to tackle existing problems.
    March 23, 2016
  • Professor Chad Sparber sits at a table while giving testimony to the Senate Subcommittee on Immigration and the National Interest
    Chad Sparber, associate professor of economics, testified before the Senate Subcommittee on Immigration and the National Interest on Thursday, February 25. During the hearing, Sparber discussed the significance of foreign-born STEM workers on native-born job opportunities and the role that the H-1B Visa program has had on technology development and job creation in the United [鈥
    March 8, 2016
  • Professor Ellen Kraly stands on the commencement stage with Curtin University Chancellor Mr. Colin Beckett and Vice-Chancellor Professor Deborah Terry
    The journey of a hundred artworks begins with a single person. Ellen Percy Kraly, William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of geography and environmental studies, has been awarded an honorary doctorate by Australia鈥檚 Curtin University in recognition of her efforts to repatriate an invaluable collection of Noongar aboriginal art to its home Down Under.
    March 3, 2016
  • Professor Ellen Kraly stands at a podium, delivering the Occasional Address to graduating students at Australia's Curtin University
    Editor鈥檚 note: These comments were delivered by Ellen Kraly, William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of geography and environmental studies, to graduates at Australia鈥檚 Curtin University on February 18, 2016. Good evening chancellor, vice-chancellor, members of the university council, distinguished guests, and good colleagues. Good evening, and joyous congratulations to the graduates of the School of [鈥
    March 3, 2016
  • Above a rainforest canopy.
    冈本视频 Associate Professor of Biology Catherine Cardel煤s was featured recently in a Nature.com article called 鈥淔ieldwork: Extreme research.鈥 Nature.com talks about the literal and metaphorical heights to which Cardel煤s must climb in order to pursue her investigations. According to the article, 鈥淸it] requires climbing up ropes while battling jungle heat and fending off biting insects. On each climb, she [鈥
    February 11, 2016
  • Flowers in front of the 冈本视频 seal wall by James B. 冈本视频 Hall
    Warm congratulations are making their way across campus in the wake of Interim Dean of the Faculty and Provost Constance Harsh鈥檚 January 28 announcement of appointments for promotion and tenure. The appointments were approved by the Board of Trustees during their winter meeting and take effect on July 1 of this year. They include: Continuous [鈥
    February 1, 2016
  • It鈥檚 too early to suggest that NUTS! will be a seminal work in the career of documentary filmmaker Penny Lane, assistant professor of art and art history. But reviews pouring in from the Sundance Film Festival, where Lane recently premiered the story of goat testicle transplant pioneer Dr. John Romulus Brinkley, have roundly praised the [鈥
    January 28, 2016
  • Ephraim Woods teaches Chemical Principles in Olin Hall.
    Deep in the forest, the same chemicals that give pine trees their smell might have a powerful effect on climate change. Sunlight can convert those naturally occurring molecules into secondary organic aerosol (SOA) particles with the potential to change local cloud cover and rainfall patterns. SOAs also help to determine how much sunlight reaches Earth [鈥
    December 17, 2015