Features

Carbon fiber material

Breakthrough: fully recyclable carbon-fiber composite

Strong and light carbon-fiber composites can be easily and cost-effectively recycled into new material just as strong as the originals, a team of researchers led by CU-Boulder has found. The composites are popular because they are lighter than aluminum and stronger than steel. Unlike metal, however, carbon-fiber composite is generally not recyclable.

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Climate change

Prof finds reasons for climate hope

When Peter Blanken flew to Paris for the 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference in December, he had somewhat low expectations. But the CU-Boulder geography professor was heartened to see and hear that the 200 countries attending COP21 agreed on the urgency to act. 鈥淭here was a strong sense that if we don鈥檛 do something in these two weeks (of the conference), it will be too late.鈥

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What Rousseau didn鈥檛 know

What Rousseau didn鈥檛 know

Economic inequality is a hot topic in a presidential election year. Economists, politicians and journalists are all weighing in 鈥 but what, exactly, can an archaeologist bring to the discussion? Sarah Kurnick, a Chancellor鈥檚 Postdoctoral Fellow at CU-Boulder, is glad you asked.

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the carcass of a dead animal lies next to the limestone quarry that borders the site of a 1970 trichloroethylene spill near Le Roy, Photographs by Donna Goldstein.

鈥楬ysteria鈥 theory short on science

In 2011, 12 high-school girls in upstate New York began to exhibit strange neurological symptoms: tics, verbal outbursts, seizure-like activity and difficulty speaking. The diagnosis was 鈥渃onversion disorder.鈥

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News

A petroglyph of an eclipse is seen with a wide-angle lens in a photograph at Chaco Canyon, where CU-Boulder researchers captured a rare Aurora Borealis in the southern night sky. Photo courtesy of Fiske Planetarium.
The greenhouse on the roof of the Ramaley Biology building is partly obscured from view at ground level. Up on the roof, it enjoys the full benefit of those famous 300 days of Boulder sunshine annually. Photo by Laura Kriho.
The Gardens of Adonis, an 1888 painting by John Reinhard Wkeguelin depicts women bearing the container-grown plants and festal rose garlands to dispose of in the sea, as part of the festival of Adonis.
Practicing yoga during pregnancy can help prevent postpartum depression. iStockphoto.
Participants in a modern cell-biology 鈥榖oot camp鈥 in Ghana pause for reflection during the course. Photo courtesy of Dick Macintosh.
Francis Beckwith has been named the fourth 兔子先生传媒文化作品ing Scholar in Conservative Thought and Policy at CU-Boulder.

Donors

Mae Morgan, a Navajo weaver, is one of several weavers who produces rugs for an auction that raises funds for the Museum of Natural History at CU-Boulder. Photo courtesy of Harry Jackson Clark Sr.
Stack of books
Archiving equipment

Alumni

Alums Alex Becker and Kristen Allen don traditional Bavarian clothes with the Regensburg Dom behind them. Photo courtesy of Alex Becker.
Alla Balabanova
CU-Boulder alumni in San Diego joined meet to network and catch up on the latest news from the university. Photo courtesy of Chrissy Reneger.

Kudos

Although enrollment in the humanities at universities nationwide has fallen in recent years, the same is not true of classics, or 鈥渃lassical studies,鈥 as it is sometimes called. Photo of Rome under stormy skies by Tyler Lansford.
16mm frame still, scanned at 2K from By Pain and Rhyme and Arabesques of Foraging (2012) a David Gatten film. Image courtesy of David Gatten.
June Gruber
June Gruber, at left, is leading an interdisciplinary effort to improve human understanding of people鈥檚 emotions. Photo by Glenn Asakawa.
Jackie Elliot