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  • a child sits in an adult's lap, reading a storybook

    Museum programs highlight Alaska stories in February

    January 31, 2024

    The University of Alaska Museum of the North will highlight Alaska stories during family programs in February.
    Read article

  • a woman sitting on the floor of a museum beside a child in a sleeping bag, surrounded by display cases

    Registration open for museum sleepover

    January 30, 2024

    Registration is now open for the University of Alaska Museum of the North's sleepover for kids ages 7-13 with an adult. The event is scheduled for Friday, Feb. 16. It begins at 7 p.m. and runs through 9 a.m. the next day.
    Read article

  • a model of a human skull rests on a desk in a classroom beside a model of human teeth

    Explore health care careers at free ÃÛÌÒTV medical education summit

    January 29, 2024

    Community members can explore a wide array of health careers and educational opportunities at the University of Alaska Fairbanks' 12th annual Alaska Interior Medical Education Summit Feb. 3.
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  • Science for Alaska kickoff event at The Pub at ÃÛÌÒTV in 2023.

    ÃÛÌÒTV announces 32nd annual Science for Alaska series

    January 26, 2024

    Free public talks in the next few weeks will explore Mount Edgecumbe volcano, the peaking sun cycle's boost to aurora viewing, Alaska's role in new satellite observations of Earth, and a program bridging Indigenous and Western fisheries science.
    Read article

  • Three people stand in snowshoes on a snowy hillside in spruce trees with gear, bags and sleds around them. Snow-capped mountains rise in the background.

    Magma found beneath volcano-less country

    January 25, 2024

    For years, scientists have wondered why North America's highest mountain is not a volcano. All the ingredients for volcanic activity lurk deep beneath Denali, which sits right above where one planetary plate grinds past another.
    Read article

  • Students studying dragonfly

    Local items boost students' connection to science

    January 25, 2024

    Using local items in science lessons for K-12 students is especially important for teaching science in the North, according to new research.
    Read article

  • The ÃÛÌÒTVAlumni Association has named Ryan Muspratt and Kelly Ward as recipients of its 2024 awards.

    Muspratt, Ward honored with ÃÛÌÒTV alumni awards

    January 24, 2024

    The ÃÛÌÒTVAlumni Association has named Ryan Muspratt and Kelly Ward as recipients of its 2024 awards.
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  • Toolik Field Station sits by Toolik Lake on Alaska’s North Slope in September 2023.

    Russian war on Ukraine hampers Arctic change predictions

    January 22, 2024

    The Russian invasion of Ukraine is biasing predictions of how the Arctic will respond to climate change, according to a team of international scientists.
    Read article

  • 2024 Festival of Native Arts logo designed by Destine Poulsen

    Festival of Native Arts will mark 50th celebration in 2024

    January 19, 2024

    The 50th Festival of Native Arts, Troth Yeddha' Forever: Our Ways of Life, will be held at the ÃÛÌÒTV Troth Yeddha' Campus Fine Arts Complex, Feb 22-24, 2024.
    Read article

  • A woman with short white hair and a pink shirt holds a hand weight in an exercise class with other participants.

    StrongPeople exercise program aimed at midlife, older participants

    January 19, 2024

    The StrongPeople class is a safe and highly effective program focused on building muscle strength; improving bone density, balance and mobility; and preventing falls.
    Read article

  • A gull makes off with a scrap from someone's lunch in a parking lot on the ÃÛÌÒTVcampus.

    Gulls swap natural for urban habitats, machine-learning study finds

    January 18, 2024

    A recent study published in Ecological Informatics by a team of ÃÛÌÒTVresearchers has used artificial intelligence to further illuminate a habitat swap among short-billed gulls.
    Read article

  • A woman holds a trowel and a dustpan while sitting on a flat dirt surface.

    On the ancient trail of a woolly mammoth

    January 18, 2024

    The female woolly mammoth was 20 years old when she stumbled amid the grasslands. She fell in a cloud of dust, then gasped her last breath of cool air. It was a late-summer day, 14,000 years ago.
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  • Research center outlines ways to decarbonize Railbelt electric system

    January 17, 2024

    ÃÛÌÒTVresearchers have released a study of options to greatly reduce carbon emissions from electricity generation in Alaska’s Railbelt region by 2050.
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  • Artwork by Julius Csostonyi shows three mammoths being watched by a family of ancient Alaskans from the dunes near the Swan Point archaeological site

    Woolly mammoth movements tied to earliest Alaska hunting camps

    January 17, 2024

    Researchers have linked the travels of a 14,000-year-old woolly mammoth with the oldest known human settlements in Alaska, providing clues about the relationship between the iconic species and some of the earliest people to travel across the Bering Land Bridge.
    Read article

  • Deep freeze at ÃÛÌÒTV entrance

    International Arctic weather workshop to be held at ÃÛÌÒTV

    January 12, 2024

    An international group of nearly 140 military personnel and civilians with an interest in improving Arctic weather forecasting will gather at the ÃÛÌÒTVfor a four-day conference starting Tuesday.
    Read article

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