October 23rd, 2019
Marine scientists tout ocean protection progress, give road map for more
More progress is urgently needed to protect the ocean, OSU scientists reported at the Our Ocean Conference.
More progress is urgently needed to protect the ocean, OSU scientists reported at the Our Ocean Conference.
Mathematics Professor Juan Restrepo has been elected a 2019 Fellow of the American Physical Society.
The $438K NSF grant has the potential to cause a fundamental shift in how faculty are incentivized and rewarded for their research endeavors.
The findings by entomologist George Poinar Jr. give a rare look at a heretofore unknown clade of invertebrates.
Biochemists find that the brains of people with congenital deafness may be rewiring themselves in ways that affect how those people learn.
Ocean-based actions have greater potential to fill in gaps in climate change mitigation than previously appreciated, marine ecologist Jane Lubchenco explains in a paper published […]
Pioneering climate scientist and alumnus Warren Washington to present the 2019 Distinguished Lecture on October 11, 2019.
Nobel Laureate Louis Ignarro, a pharmacologist sometimes referred to as the “Father of Viagra,” will give a public lecture, “The Road to Stockholm – A […]
The third annual Juntos Chemistry Overnight Camp delighted 22 Oregon high school students June 29-30, 2019.
Marine ecologist Sarah Henkel glued acoustic tags onto 10 Dungeness crabs to learn more about their movements.
A compound with potential as a treatment for ALS has gained further promise in a new study by biochemist Joe Beckman.
Distinguished marine ecologist Jane Lubchenco proposes a “new narrative for the ocean” in an editorial published in the journal Science.
Congratulations 2019 SURE Science Scholars!
Microbiologists at Oregon State University have made an important advance in understanding the roles that gut bacteria play in human health.
Biochemist Joe Beckman has found a new molecule fragmentation technology to allow scientists to conduct research in new ways and across many diverse fields.
Congratulations to 2019 Fulbright scholars: biochemistry and biophysics senior Delaney Smith and biology Ph.D. student Andrea Burton.
OSU microbiologist Maude David is part of a $1.94 million grant to look for possible connections between the human microbiome and autism spectrum disorder.
Science students organize a very successful biomedical ethics conference.
Four College of Science students and alumni have received prestigious National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program awards in 2019.