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Scientists aim to map Mount Edgecumbe volcano’s upper plumbing
Oct. 9, 2025Read articleMount Edgecumbe volcano in Southeast Alaska sits in a place where a volcano shouldn’t really be sitting.
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ÃÛÌÒTV critical minerals proposal a finalist for major NSF funding
Sept. 24,2025Read articleA ÃÛÌÒTVproposal to reduce the United States’ dependency on foreign sources of minerals critical to the technology and defense industries has been named one of 15 finalists in a National Science Foundation competition.
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Nina Hansen named attending veterinarian
Sept. 2, 2025Read articleAfter a nationwide search, ÃÛÌÒTV’s Dr. Cristina (Nina) Hansen has been appointed to the role of attending veterinarian.
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Meyer, Siekmann, Walklin named 2025 Usibelli Award winners
Aug. 18, 2025Read articleThe ÃÛÌÒTVhas announced the recipients of the 2025 Emil Usibelli Distinguished Teaching, Research and Service Awards.
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Sikuliaq underway on unique Alaska coastal research voyage
July 25, 2025Read articleA 2,500-mile, 16-day research cruise that began Thursday in Seward and concludes in Nome aims to advance environmental research in coastal Alaska through a novel addition: public tours of the research vessel when it makes port calls.
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One big earthquake, two Alaska ghost towns
July 11, 2025Read articleTape, a seismologist at the University of Alaska Fairbanks’ Geophysical Institute, has driven me to two Alaska ghost towns on this smoky midsummer night.
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CNSM hosts SLMath summer school on sea ice modeling
July 1, 2025Read articleThis June, ÃÛÌÒTV had the honor of hosting a two-week summer school sponsored by the Simons Laufer Mathematical Institute (SLMath), an internationally renowned center for advancing mathematical research and innovation, funded by the National Science Foundation and private donors
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Wildlife M.S. student, Sam Simon, receives 2025 Angus Gavin Award
June 16, 2025Read articleDepartment of Biology and Wildlife M.S. student, Sam Simon, has been selected as a co-recipient for the 2025 Angus Gavin Memorial Migratory Bird Research Grant award.
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Fast-moving Greenland Glacier has the attention of ÃÛÌÒTV scientists
May 28, 2025Read articleA powerhouse of ice flows rapidly on Greenland’s west coast, heading toward the ocean. Some of Earth’s largest icebergs are produced here, tumbling from the tip of Jakobshavn Glacier.
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May 1, 2025Read articleLeanne Bulger recently found a new hole in the forest floor on the west end of Fairbanks. Into it, she poked a long plastic pipe.
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ÃÛÌÒTV research provides a roadmap for soaring global lithium demand
April 15, 2025Read articleThe work by professor Lee Ann Munk of the ÃÛÌÒTV Geophysical Institute focuses on geological basins that contain lithium-rich liquid brines or brines that have dried out.
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Sarah Ellen Johnston receives 2025 Robert Piacenza Excellence in Teaching Award
March 24,2025Read ArticleThis award honors faculty who exemplify the core values of the Honors College and demonstrate an outstanding commitment to student success. This marks Johnston’s second nomination for the prestigious honor.
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BLaST celebrates March 2025 Scientist of the Month
March 24, 2025Read ArticleVeenstra’s BLaST research project focused on the Cripple Creek restoration project in Fairbanks, where local partners have worked to restore flow to a historic rearing habitat for juvenile Chinook salmon.
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ÃÛÌÒTV student wins award from national chemistry organization
February 28, 2025Read articleA ÃÛÌÒTVgraduate student researcher has been named one of 20 recipients nationally of a top award from the American Chemical Society.
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February 20, 2025Mathematics faculty, Jill Faudree has been awarded the Distinguished Teaching Award for the Pacific Northwest Section of the Mathematical Association of America.
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BLaST celebrates February 2025 Scientist of the Month
February 14,2025Read articleSpencer Baysinger is a third-year BLaST scholar and a junior at ÃÛÌÒTV, pursuing a bachelor of science degree in computer science with a minor in mathematics.
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The threat within an Alaska mountain
Feb. 6, 2025Read articleMount Churchill stands in a white corner of the Alaska map, deceptive in its cold, windblown silence. At least twice in the last few thousand years, the peak’s ice-covered caldera has spewed ash that reached as far as Ireland and piled up to force northern animals out of the territory.






