Colorado testing fish in new push to prevent health harm from toxic “forever chemicals”
For fish, state health researchers are teaming with environmental engineers at the Colorado School of Mines.
September 20, 2020
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Can Tesla help solve one of the thorniest ethical problems with electric vehicles?
“The sector as a whole is just beginning to look at what the answers are,” said Sara Hastings-Simon, an energy transition researcher at the Colorado School of Mines.
September 10, 2020
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Dead rainbow trout floated on the South Platte. Could fish detectives crack the case?
Davenport emailed the Denver Department of Health and Environment and alerted Ashley Rust, a research associate in civil and environmental engineering at the Colorado School of Mines who also advises Revesco, developer of The River Mile, on trout ....
September 10, 2020
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Some Colorado temps are increasing at twice the global average, fueling wildfires, scientists say
“We have noticed that there have been some very, very large fires,” said Chris Elvidge, who developed the technology to detect extremely hot temperatures on earth from satellites in space.
September 4, 2020
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Record giving at Colorado universities is one pandemic bright spot, but uncertainty looms
“Next year will be the tougher year,” School of Mines President Paul Johnson reiterated. “… If the pandemic has sort of illustrated one thing for people, it’s that the future of higher education is different than it was last year.”
September 4, 2020
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Mines makes masked move-in
There was a point when Colorado School of Mines freshman Matthew Micha wasn’t sure if he should come to campus this year. But as he walked around on the morning of Aug. 14 with new friend Oliver Noyes after moving to campus earlier in the week, he ....
August 25, 2020
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Catastrophic failures raise alarm about dams containing muddy mine wastes
“The consequences of a failure are getting much bigger,” says Priscilla Nelson, a geotechnical engineer at the Colorado School of Mines.
August 20, 2020
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Drivers Should Be ‘Pretty Wary’ Of I-70 In Glenwood Canyon, Even After The Grizzly Creek Fire Is Out
The fire will lead to more rock falls, said Paul Santi, a professor of geology and geological engineering at the Colorado School of Mines. ... “For the next year or two, I’d be pretty wary of driving through there during a rainstorm,” Santi said.
August 20, 2020
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Grizzly Creek Fire could impact Glenwood Canyon, Colorado River long after it's contained, experts say
Paul Santi, a professor of geology at Colorado School of Mines in Golden, said the burning of vegetation through the steep, cavernous canyon could lead to more rainfall runoff and rockfalls, in an area where falling rock is already a frequent hazard.
August 19, 2020
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The Commodities Note: Fall in US gas flaring gives cause for optimism
"In the past 12 months, gas flaring in the US has actually declined by 70 per cent, according to numbers provided by the Earth Observation Group at the Payne Institute for Public Policy," co-wrote Morgan Bazilian, director of the Payne Institute.