WDTN: How rare are earthquakes in Ohio?
August 29, 2023
UC Associate Professor Daniel Sturmer tells WDTN-2 that earthquakes are relatively rare in the Midwest.
August 29, 2023
UC Associate Professor Daniel Sturmer tells WDTN-2 that earthquakes are relatively rare in the Midwest.
November 27, 2023
UC Professor Thomas Algeo talks to Newsweek about the likelihood of a volcanic eruption that prompted evacuations in Iceland.
January 18, 2024
UC paleoecologist Joshua Miller tells the New York Times that by studying mammoth tusks, we can learn more about their diet, environmental changes and ultimately why they went extinct.
March 7, 2024
Fox19 highlights a field trip that fifth and sixth graders from the Clifton Area Neighborhood School took to UC for a visit with geosciences faculty to learn about the environment. The science day was sponsored by UC's Center for Public Engagement with Science.
February 9, 2024
UC Professor Thomas Algeo talks to the Washington Post about what to expect from the third volcanic eruption in three months outside Grindavik, Iceland.
April 23, 2024
UC College of Arts and Sciences professor tells WVXU that Ohio's glacial past might explain how Dent got its name.
February 26, 2024
UC Associate Professor Andy Czaja reflects on what we have learned about Mars three years into Perseverance mission.
May 24, 2024
UC Professor Amy Townsend-Small talks to the New York Times about the issue of abandoned and orphaned oil and gas wells.
February 15, 2023
What you post on social media can be in conflict with your employers standards, says UC social media expert Jeffrey Blevins. More and more often people are getting dinged, or worse, for posts that put their employers in a bad light. Blevins suggests a social media review/edit of content and more thought put into posts.
September 15, 2022
UC College of Arts and Sciences associate professor Amy Townsend-Small talks to the WFMP program Sustainability Now! and WOSU's the Ohio Statehouse about Kentucky's leaking oil and gas wells and a new federal initiative to cap them.