Rams Shape Science
Meet outstanding members of the College of Natural Sciences community who are shaping the future of science, our society, and the world.
Meet outstanding members of the College of Natural Sciences community who are shaping the future of science, our society, and the world.
A $1 million DOE-funded study will combine field experiments and computer modeling to assess how extreme weather patterns brought on by climate change impact grasslands.
DeLuca was named as an ASCB fellow in part due to her research on the biomolecular underpinnings of human diseases, like cancer.
Finke was selected to receive the Arthur C. Cope Late Career Scholar’s Award for his exceptional and scholarly efforts distinguishing homogeneous from heterogeneous catalysis of organic reactions.
Priya Krakker, a biology student at Colorado State University, is learning, researching, and hoping to teach genetics.
Mingzhong Wu, professor in the Department of Physics and Director of the Center for Advanced Magnetics, a Program of Research and Scholarly Excellence, has been named a Fellow of the American Physical Society.
Biodiversity expert Chris Funk has co-authored a paper examining genetic variation as a crucial factor for wild populations' short- and long-term viability.
For decades education researchers have struggled with a stubborn problem: computer science introductory courses are notoriously difficult. About one third of the students fail or drop out. A new team of CSU researchers has an innovative solution.
Hortensia Soto, professor in the Department of Mathematics, has been named the president-elect of the Mathematics Association of America.
Josh Johnson, a United States Air Force veteran who recently graduated from the Department of Psychology, sees opportunities and dives in headfirst. In every group Johnson joins, he stands out as an earnest, devoted leader. As such, new doors and opportunities open along every path he walks.