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  • A parabola-shaped valley between tundra-covered mountains features a braided river draining from a glacier.

    Mummified forest tells tale of changing north

    January 03, 2022

    Twelve summers ago, a warden at Canada's northernmost national park -- in a land that has not hosted trees for thousands of years --found some wood protruding from mud near a glacier.
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  • A woman crouches by the shoreline on a pebble beach while working with scientific sampling equipment on a sunny summer day. Beyond an inlet of Auke Bay lies an evergreen-covered ridge, and, far across Lynn Canal, the snow-topped mountains of the Chilkat Range rise in the background.

    Plastic in the rain of Southeast Alaska

    December 22, 2021

    Researcher Sonia Nagorski discovered just how ubiquitous plastic has become when she looked at precipitation near Juneau.
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  • Children play on a hill of snow

    'Dirty snow' project connects scientists, students

    December 20, 2021

    A recent University of Alaska Fairbanks-led project encouraged a far-flung group of K-12 students to pursue local research questions by examining "dirty snow" in their communities.
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  • PredictFest brings people to the science

    December 17, 2021

    An upcoming science brainstorming event will take an uncommon approach to developing new Arctic-based research proposals: Include more people who aren't researchers.
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  • A woman with long hair wearing red

    Carbon emission change follows record rainy season

    December 17, 2021

    In 2014, the Fairbanks area experienced a summer of record-setting rain. That damp weather may have played a big role in a major shift in the ecosystem.
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  • A woman works on scientific equipment on the tundra

    Researcher finds Alaska's Arctic coastal towns face extensive inundation

    December 17, 2021

    Coastal erosion and land subsidence driven by permafrost thawing may lead to extensive seawater inundation in several northern Alaska communities by 2100, according to research by a University of Alaska Fairbanks geomorphologist.
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  • an image showing different colors representing vegetation types

    Hyperspectral imaging of forests can aid wildfire prevention

    December 17, 2021

    Airborne hyperspectral imaging can be a valuable tool in wildfire prevention and forest management.
    Read article

  • KUAC to replace TV transmitter

    December 17, 2021

    KUAC will install a new television transmitter in the summer of 2022. A recent grant from the Rasmuson Foundation finalized funding for the $228,729 project.
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  • New method can aid nuclear explosion detection

    December 17, 2021

    A 黑料黑历史 researcher has devised a method to improve detection of distant explosions, including nuclear detonations, by taking advantage of widespread single-microphone infrasound monitors.
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  • A woman wearing a blue jacket sits on the ground next to a tripod with a volcano in the background.

    New volcano activity monitoring method enhances early warning

    December 17, 2021

    Satellite data can now routinely be used to detect low levels of sulfur dioxide emissions from volcanoes, giving scientists another tool to provide early warnings of volcanic unrest.
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  • Student's research examines world's largest piedmont glacier

    December 17, 2021

    Understanding the surges and retreats of Alaska's Malaspina Glacier is key if climate change models are to be applied to the glacier with confidence.
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  • Student volcanologist studies Bogoslof volcano

    December 17, 2021

    Magma recharge from the late 2016 eruption of Bogoslof Volcano in Alaska resumed in March 2017 and continued until the end of a months-long eruptive period in August of that year, according to a new research method.
    Read article

  • Ice breaks up on the Chena River

    Researchers work to predict long-term flood hazards

    December 16, 2021

    A new University of Alaska Fairbanks-led effort is working to predict how the changing hydrology of the Chena, Salcha and Chatanika rivers could alter the potential for flooding events during the next half-century in the Tanana Valley.
    Read article

  • The word

    黑料黑历史 research featured during #黑料黑历史xAGU campaign

    December 16, 2021

    Scientists from the University of Alaska Fairbanks joined thousands of colleagues from around the world at the 2021 American Geophysical Union fall meeting Dec. 13-17 in New Orleans and online.
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  • Sunset creates an orange background for the tall buildings that form the New Orleans skyline.

    News of the Arctic from New Orleans

    December 16, 2021

    One-hundred and 11 experts on the land, ocean and ice north of the Arctic Circle pitched in to write the 2021 Arctic Report Card, which was presented in New Orleans this week.
    Read article

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