IHFTC opens in Oman with panel on the future of Middle East unconventional development

Jennifer Miskimins, professor and department head of petroleum engineering and incoming 2026 Society of Petroleum Engineering president, welcomed attendees to the SPE International Hydraulic Fracturing Technology Conference and Exhibition in Muscat, the capital city of the Sultanate of Oman.
September 23, 2025

Only two Colorado universities rank in top 100 nationally

Colorado School of Mines ranked 80th among universities nationally in U.S. News & World Report's annual higher education ranking. Mines ranked 40th among public universities.
September 23, 2025

An electric route to safe, practical hydrogen storage

Ryan O'Hayre, professor of metallurgical and materials engineering, says practical hydrogen storage systems need to be stable for more than 1,000 cycles. He added that the chemical and mechanical stability of the electrodes, electrolytes, and their interfaces over the course of thousands of charging cycles remains unproven.
September 23, 2025

Two universities in Colorado among nation's 100 best in 2026 U.S. News & World rankings

Two universities in Colorado were ranked among the top 100 in the nation in U.S. News & World Report’s 2026 Best Colleges rankings. Colorado School of Mines was No. 80 while the University of Colorado was No 97.
September 23, 2025

Brandon Dugan is looking for fresh water under the ocean floor

KOA radio host Ross Kaminsky talks with Brandon Dugan, professor and associate department head in geophysics and Baker Hughes Chair in Petrophysics and Borehole Geophysics, about his discovery of fresh water under the ocean near Martha's Vineyard.
September 19, 2025

Kennecott Mine expansion raises environmental concerns

Ian Lange, professor of economics and business, explains that demand for copper is being driven by surging electricity needs.
September 18, 2025

When snow falls in burned forests it melts easier

The conclusions of a Science Advances journal article authored by Arielle Koshkin, doctoral candidate in hydrologic science and engineering, and Adrienne Marshall, assistant professor of geology and geological engineering, is summarized in this radio news report.
September 17, 2025

Snow melts fast in wildfire burn areas, imperiling water supply

Arielle Koshkin, doctoral candidate in hydrologic science and engineering, and Adrienne Marshall, assistant professor of geology and geological engineering, led a study published in Science Advances that concluded snow melts more quickly in forests that have been burned by wildfire.
September 17, 2025

Small modular nuclear reactors are having a moment. Will they arrive in time for Pueblo?

Mark Jensen, director of the Nuclear Science and Engineering Program, explains why small modular nuclear reactors would have a lower risk of meltdown than traditional reactors.
September 15, 2025

What stands between Broncos and a stadium at Burnham Yard?

John Spear, professor of civil and environmental engineering and quantitative biosciences and engineering, notes that the time it takes to cleanup contaminants at the new Broncos stadium site will depend on what scientists find when they analyze the environmental hazards found there.
September 14, 2025

What giant 'secret fresh water' deposits off US coast could mean for drinking water

Brandon Dugan, professor and associate department head of geophysics and Baker Hughes Chair in Petrophysics and Borehole Geophysics, discusses why finding fresh water under the ocean could matter to communities around the globe.
September 13, 2025

How the U.S. will break China’s rare earth dominance—and how to play it

Morgan Bazilian, director of the Payne Institute for Public Policy, says the public/private partnership that has formed around the firm MP, the largest U.S.-based rare earth company, is a game changer.
September 12, 2025