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 Alexei Lubchenco Menge fellowship introduced in 2019 is opening new opportunities for biology and zoology students interested in ecology and field work.
Mathematician is part of a $141K, one-year grant from Google to enhance and increase integration between computer science education and mathematics teacher education.
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 […]
Statistician Lisa Madsen and collaborators help estimate the total mortality of birds and bats at wind farms.
Two new grants will assist marine scientists at Oregon State University to make significant progress in global ocean protection.
Physicist Bo Sun had a breakthrough discovery that remove bottlenecks to making more effective metastatic cancer treatments a reality with tremendous social impact.
Scientific discovery at OSU is driven by big thinking, insatiable curiosity and out-of-the-box ideas that find a way into the economy.
College of Science research funding surges in fiscal year 2019, increasing 46% to $16.46 million in new grants and awards.
Sally Hacker helped lead a team of scientists who developed a mathematical model that predicts the evolution of the beach profile.
Doctoral student Patrick Morar is the 2019-20 Christopher and Catherine Mathews Graduate Fellow in the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics.
Marine ecologist Sarah Henkel glued acoustic tags onto 10 Dungeness crabs to learn more about their movements.
New strategies for river management are needed to maintain water supplies and avoid big crashes in populations of aquatic life.
Goldwater Scholar Kendra Jackson is a biochemistry and molecular biology senior with big dreams of a future in medicine and research.