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  • A gull makes off with a scrap from someone's lunch in a parking lot on the ²ÊÉñix¹ÙÍø campus.

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

    January 18, 2024

    A recent study published in Ecological Informatics by a team of ²ÊÉñix¹ÙÍø researchers 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.
    Read article

  • Research center outlines ways to decarbonize Railbelt electric system

    January 17, 2024

    ²ÊÉñix¹ÙÍø researchers have released a study of options to greatly reduce carbon emissions from electricity generation in Alaska’s Railbelt region by 2050.
    Read article

  • 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 UAF entrance

    International Arctic weather workshop to be held at UAF

    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 ²ÊÉñix¹ÙÍø for a four-day conference starting Tuesday.
    Read article

  • 2023 group graduation photo

    RAHI application period opens for summer 2024

    January 12, 2024

    The Rural Alaska Honors Institute is accepting applications for its summer 2024 session. The session will run from May 28 to July 12. Applications are due by Friday, March 1.
    Read article

  • A line composed of hundreds of of worm-like insect larvae cross brown dirt. A multitool with measurement marks also sits on the dirt, providing a scale showing that the individual larvae are about 8 millimeters long.

    'Snakeworm' mystery yields species new to science

    January 11, 2024

    Add another species to the list of organisms oozing over Alaska -- a tiny gnat whose larvae sometimes crawl over each other in such numbers that together they resemble a snake.
    Read article

  • Students pose for a photo holding up giant check and awards.

    Arctic Innovation Competition submission deadline is March 1

    January 09, 2024

    The Arctic Innovation Competition is accepting ideas for 2024. Competitors of all ages in North America may submit their ideas for a chance to win cash prizes of up to $15,000. The deadline to submit is March 1, 2024, 11:59 p.m. Alaska time.
    Read article

  • rodent skulls, porcupine quills and paper flying squirrel patterns displayed on a beaver skin

    January museum programs focus on rodents

    January 08, 2024

    Family programs at the University of Alaska Museum of the North will focus on rodents during January.
    Read article

  • The narrow, short trunks of burned black spruce trees jut from a snowy hillside below a sky adorned with thin clouds lit by sunlight.

    Alaska's year without a summer

    January 04, 2024

    Using evidence held in white spruce trees, researchers think a 1783 volcanic eruption in Iceland was a catastrophe for northwest Alaska residents, who had no idea why their July turned into November that year.
    Read article

  • Giant trevally aggregate off the southern coast of Mozambique

    Researchers use new techniques to map vast history of tropical fishes

    January 03, 2024

    An international research team has assembled an unprecedented "tree of life" for a group of more than 150 related tropical fishes, a project that uncovered clues about how distinct species were likely able to evolve over millions of years.
    Read article

  • A full moon rises over a barren snowy hilltop. Spruce trees cover the lower slopes of the hill, which is illuminated by pink sunlight.

    The super moons of this Alaska winter

    January 03, 2024

    Has the moon seemed exceptionally noticeable this winter? There's a reason: The full moon currently never sets for many Alaskans.
    Read article

  • Pesticide applicator training classes scheduled for January, April

    December 21, 2023

    A three-day certified pesticide applicator training course is scheduled for Jan. 30-Feb. 1, with a second course planned for April 23-25. Both will be taught by the University Alaska ²ÊÉñix¹ÙÍø Cooperative Extension Service via Zoom and are available statewide. Each class will meet from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
    Read article

  • A woman taking a photo of a coyote in an urban trail landscape. They're only a short distance apart, separated by a low wire fence.

    The coyotes of San Francisco

    December 21, 2023

    As we were hiking up one of the many trails through the Presidio, there appeared a coyote, quite close. Wary but accustomed to operating close to people, it crunched on the remains of something feathered. Heather got some nice photos before the coyote disappeared into the brush.
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  • fireworks in a dark sky with buildings in the background

    UAF to host New Year's Eve Sparktacular fireworks display

    December 19, 2023

    The ²ÊÉñix¹ÙÍø will host the ²ÊÉñix¹ÙÍø Curling Lions' 34th annual Sparktacular celebration on Sunday, Dec. 31. Fireworks will be launched from UAF's West Ridge starting at 8 p.m.
    Read article

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