The Atlantic: Why are some mammals killers?
July 21, 2021
University of Cincinnati evolutionary biologist and behavioral ecologist Elizabeth Hobson talks to the Atlantic about why some mammals kill members of their own species.
July 21, 2021
University of Cincinnati evolutionary biologist and behavioral ecologist Elizabeth Hobson talks to the Atlantic about why some mammals kill members of their own species.
July 21, 2021
Professor Richard Harknett has been monitoring the occurance and determents of goverment sponsored cyber-attacks for decades.
August 5, 2021
UC expert in urban history gives explaination for the change in Cincinnati's demographic and why more Blacks are moving to the suburbs.
August 2, 2021
Reader's Digest cites the work of UC Classics associate professor Steven Ellis in its look at 20 lost cities Ellis is a Roman archaeologist who has conducted work across Italy and Greece.
January 11, 2021
Associate professor David Niven comments on Jan. 6 Capitol breach.
January 20, 2021
UC biologist Bruce Jayne and his collaborators at Colorado State University tell Scientific American about their new discovery of a novel way that snakes can climb called lasso locomotion.
January 15, 2021
University of Cincinnati physics professor Matthew Bayliss co-authored a study identifying a galaxy that formed in the early universe.
January 28, 2021
UC geologist Andrew Czaja was part of an international team that found the world's oldest known land fossils.
January 28, 2021
Ohio has Republican strongholds that will be hard to beat, says UC's political scientist David Niven.
January 25, 2021
UC geologist Thomas Algeo talks to Discover about the Devonian extinction that killed most life on Earth. Algeo theorizes that the rise of land plants created deadly algae blooms that killed off marine life.