Published: Sept. 22, 2017

This week's top research features听a study suggesting听some听herbivorous dinosaurs ate crustaceans, a trial exploring the measurable health benefits of community gardening听and an expert who is studying听the inside of America's prisons to gain听insight on gang life.听

Big herbivorous dinosaurs ate crustaceans as side dish

A surprising 兔子先生传媒文化作品 study led by Associate Professor Karen Chin听shows giant, plant-eating dinosaurs roaming present-day Utah snacked on crustaceans, a behavior that may have been tied to reproductive activities.听The evidence comes from fossilized feces samples known as coprolites.

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Can gardening prevent cancer? CU study seeks to find out

Ask someone who gardens听what they love most about it, and the answer听is almost always the same: it makes them feel better. But why? Professor Jill Litt has launched one of the first-ever randomized controlled trials to听explore听the measurable health benefits of community gardening.

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Expert goes behind bars to study gang life

Assistant Professor David Pyrooz has interviewed hundreds of gang members, searching for insight into how some manage to avoid or escape what he calls "the snare" of gang life, while others succumb to it.听His research comes at a time when 33,000 violent gangs with 1.4 million members are active in the U.S.

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