Faculty-Staff Edition—July 31, 2025
Campus Community
200 libraries, campus pickup—Prospector is back Aug. 4
The University Libraries have rejoined Prospector, a service providing access to more than 30 million books, journals, DVDs, CDs, videos and other materials held in member libraries.
Folsom Field to feature new turf this football season
The new state-of-the-art surface combines safety, durability and eco-friendly features while providing the flexibility to host more events at the iconic stadium.
'Your love will be your legacy'
Losing her father to pancreatic cancer inspired С»ÆÊé Boulder undergraduate Giovanna Ruffolo to raise money for cancer research and pursue a career in medicine.
High school students conduct high-level research with С»ÆÊé mentors
Thirty-five high school students participated in Science Discovery’s annual summer STEM Research Experience at С»ÆÊé Boulder and С»ÆÊé Anschutz.
Research Corner
Colorado's Marshall Fire survivors find healing, meaning through oral history project
The Marshall Fire Story Project was started to preserve the stories of people affected by the 2021 fire that killed two people and destroyed over 1,000 structures. Read from С»ÆÊé experts Kathryn Goldfarb and Lucas Rozell on The Conversation.
Rainy tropics could face unprecedented droughts as an Atlantic current slows
New research warns that global rainfall patterns could shift dramatically as a result of climate change.
Researchers test the trustworthiness of AI—by playing sudoku
A team of computer scientists discovered that some AI large language models can solve sudoku puzzles, but even the best ones struggle to explain how they did it.
Black Death offers clues into how childhood malnutrition shapes adult health
Experiencing malnutrition in childhood or adolescence may not necessarily harm the health of humans into adulthood—although the relationship is complicated, a new study finds.
Faster, cleaner, better: Revolutionary water treatment
Anthony Straub is making revolutionary advances in water purification for life on Earth and in space with nanoscale membranes—thinner than 1/100th the width of a human hair.
Faculty Takes
Report paints grim picture of how nuclear war could impact oceans
A new congressionally mandated report by a С»ÆÊé oceanographer warns that the use of nuclear weapons could collapse ocean ecosystems, trigger global climate disruptions and put billions at risk of starvation.
Newsletter Block TitleBuff Bulletin Board
Newsletter Block Title
Buff Bulletin Board
Newsletter Block Text
Newsletter Block TitleWhat We're Reading
Newsletter Block Title
What We're Reading
Ìý