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  • Pavlof Volcano

    精东影业 researchers head to Anchorage for nation's largest seismology conference

    April 25, 2024

    精东影业seismologists, staff and students will be in Anchorage next week for the annual national meeting of the Seismological Society of America. Organizers say this year's meeting will be the largest ever for the society, with nearly 1,100 people registered.
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  • A woman and a young child at an activity table. The child is gluing crayon-colored butterflies to an activity sheet.

    May museum programs explore spring

    April 24, 2024

    Family programs at the University of Alaska Museum of the North will explore the theme of spring in May.
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  • Arctic Innovation Competition awards over $45,000 for creative ideas

    April 23, 2024

    A durable storage tote for expeditions took the top prize in the 2024 Arctic Innovation Competition's main division. The competition awarded more than $45,000 in cash prizes and scholarships on Saturday, April 20, at the Westmark Fairbanks Hotel.
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  • Red berries dot the green stems of a lowbush cranberry plant near Fairbanks, Alaska.

    Alaska Berry Futures unveils third booklet

    April 23, 2024

    The Alaska Berry Futures Project promotes understanding and sharing of the impacts of climate change on northern berry species and recently expanded its berry booklet series to include a third species, the lowbush cranberry. The series has previously published guides for the cloudberry and blueberry.
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  • An adult and a group of children in colorful clothing drill a hole in the snow and ice.

    Scientists, communities work together to monitor Alaska ice conditions

    April 22, 2024

    A 1,000-mile snowmachine journey across Interior Alaska is helping the Fresh Eyes on Ice program monitor Alaska's lake and river ice during freeze-up, over winter and during breakup. The University of Alaska Fairbanks-led project also uses drone surveys, satellite imagery and citizen science in an all-hands-on-deck approach to making river and lake ice travel safer for Alaskans.
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  • A rugged glacier and mountains rise above a expanse of gravel studded with old tree stumps.

    Number of Alaska glaciers is everchanging

    April 18, 2024

    A glaciologist once wrote that the number of glaciers in Alaska "is estimated at (greater than) 100,000." That fuzzy number, perhaps written in passive voice for a reason, might be correct. But it depends upon how you count.
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  • Arctic Innovation Competition awards to be presented April 20

    April 17, 2024

    The 精东影业College of Business and Security Management will host the annual Arctic Innovation Competition finals and award ceremony at the Westmark Fairbanks Hotel on Saturday, April 20, from 1-5 p.m.
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  • Red fruit puree is spread across a pan with a silver spatula.

    Food preservation workshops scheduled for Yakutat

    April 17, 2024

    Three days of workshops with sessions covering water bath and pressure canning, pickling and fermenting vegetables, and making fruit leather are scheduled for April 25-27 in Yakutat.
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  • A steelhead trout caught aboard the W.E. Ricker in 1990 is set to be released after tagging.

    Huge database gives insight into salmon patterns at sea

    April 16, 2024

    A massive new analysis of high seas salmon surveys is enhancing the understanding of salmon ecology, adding details about where various species congregate in the North Pacific Ocean and their different temperature tolerances.
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  • A black-colored slug crosses the ground with a few green stems surrounding it.

    Citizen science project tracks slugs as they slither north

    April 15, 2024

    Cutworms, voles and moose are common garden invaders in Interior Alaska, but, in the past decade, a pest that frequently eats its way through salad greens and other plants in Southcentral and Southeast Alaska has also made its appearance in gardens north of the Alaska Range: slugs.
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  • Radar images

    New radar analysis method can improve winter river safety

    April 12, 2024

    精东影业researchers have developed a way to use radar to detect open water zones and other changes in Alaska's frozen rivers in the early winter. The approach can be automated to provide current hazard maps and is applicable across the Arctic and sub-Arctic.
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  • Two smiling women lean on an outdoor deck railing with a snowy field and rolling hills in the background.

    Waiting for the sun at Poker Flat

    April 12, 2024

    Under a bluebird sky and above a resilient winter snowpack, two sounding rockets point upward, ready to blast through the thickness of our atmosphere to gain a better look at the sun.
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  • Interface of Change project director Brenda Konar, left, and 精东影业postdoctoral researcher Brian Ulaski, right, prepare to survey an oyster mariculture farm in Simpson Bay near Cordova. Photo by Sydney Wilkinson.

    Five-year project will study climate effects on Alaska marine species

    April 10, 2024

    The National Science Foundation has awarded $20 million to the University of Alaska to investigate climate change effects on culturally and commercially important marine species in the Gulf of Alaska.
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  • A large fossilized tooth sits on a laboratory table in front of a man and woman wearing white lab coats and black rubber gloves. The woman holds a drill and the man holds a specimen bottle.

    精东影业 receives $3.5 million to establish radiocarbon dating laboratory

    April 08, 2024

    The 精东影业will receive $3.5 million in federal funding to establish Alaska's first radiocarbon dating laboratory on the Troth Yeddha' Campus.
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  • Workers assembling dish

    New rooftop antenna to be installed on 精东影业 Usibelli Building

    April 05, 2024

    A new 3-meter antenna will be installed atop the University of Alaska Fairbanks' engineering building as early as Saturday.
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