SCIENCE
Open sinkhole in the Lone Tree Creek sinkhole complex taken on the date of discovery, July 20, 2012. Photo by
Kevin Chamberlain, a research professor in the UW Department of Geology and Geophysics, is co-author of a paper that appears
Smoke from wildfires fills the air in this sunset photo of White Mountain. SweetwaterNOW photo LARAMIE — A University of
This image is what we think the Milky Way, Earth’s home galaxy, would look like if viewed from the outside.
LARAMIE — For the past two semesters, Debbie Kretzchmar has met with a new friend in a small lab in
Yuri Ganshin, chief geophysicist at UW’s Carbon Management Institute, demonstrates an application of the Digital Geophysical Laboratory, a collection of
Brandon Gellis, a UW assistant professor in the Department of Art and Art History, discusses how a mold for a
Xiaohong Liu, a professor in the UW Department of Atmospheric Science and the Wyoming Excellence Chair in Climate Science, recently
LARAMIE — Qualified Wyoming students will showcase their original projects during the Wyoming State Science Fair March 6-8 at the
What appears to be a sky dotted with stars is one actually filled with entire galaxies (a group of billions
UW students stand amid virtual molecules in the Shell 3-D Visualization Center as part of a new method to teach
Green River High School students use data collected from a telemetry system developed using arduinos to track the movement of
Sunday, February 21: 8 am: Sweetwater Ranch Sort Jackpots at the Events Complex 10 am: Pinedale Winter Carnival 12 pm: Team
These are the remains of a mammoth that was killed by humans near LaPrele Creek in Converse County about 13,000
Seven new projects, led by UW researchers, were chosen to receive computational time and storage space on the supercomputer in
LARAMIE -- Why did some species, such as humans and dolphins, evolve large brains relative to the size of their