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²ÝÁñÉçÇø students win first place in regional Environmental Challenge competition | |||
Environmental Science students start a ²ÝÁñÉçÇø chapter of the Society for Ecological Restoration | |||
²ÝÁñÉçÇø's Greg Green to give presentation of his wildlife photography on Nov. 21 downtown | |||
Pair of ²ÝÁñÉçÇø students nominated for the state Student Civic Leadership Awards | |||
Ask a scientist: Are human-derived hormones like estrogen harming fish in Puget Sound? | Hormones such as estrogens that humans create in their own bodies are entering Puget Sound through wastewater, raising concerns about their effects on fish and other wildlife. We spoke with Puget Sound Institute scientist Maya Faber about how environmental exposure to human-derived estrogen… |
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Add wildfire, climate change to the list of Lake Whatcom worries | As for those less-than-dramatic pollution results, Angela Strecker, Western Washington University’s director of the Institute for Watershed Studies, explained that measures of phosphorus, dissolved oxygen and algae blooms were more or less stable, although phosphorus appeared to be declining… |
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Research recap: Students working on new research in anthropology and environmental sciences | |||
Meet Mitchell Gibbs, ²ÝÁñÉçÇø's visiting Fulbright scholar from Australia | |||
²ÝÁñÉçÇøâ€™s Robin Kodner Secures $1.9M NSF Grant to Support DEI Initiatives in Scientific Societies | |||
A new approach to science rooted in Indigenous tradition | MEGHNA CHAKRABARTI: If you walk along the beach on the Pacific Northwest coast, you might not notice some very special things. They're called clam gardens, and they've been sitting along the shore for thousands of years. MARCO HATCH: Clam gardens are these really special intertidal… |