COS News

  • Research
    AI and physics
    “The basic premise is that AI can help us do better physics, and something that is less expected is that physics can also help us understand AI better,” said Northeastern professor James Halverson.

    AI and physics have more in common than you might think.

  • Research
    Mark Patterson
    Formed by superheated glacial water from the last ice age, the hydrothermal vents Professor Mark Patterson studies have been bubbling beneath the fjord for centuries.

    Professor receives Fulbright to explore one of the world’s most unique hydrothermal vents

  • View news for:

    Showing 224 results in Marine and Environmental Sciences

  • College of Science Connects: The Plastics Problem

    College of Science Connects: The Plastics Problem

        Hear from Professor Aron Stubbins and students to discuss the interactions between humans and the environment. Explore the global cycle of plastics, the processes that breakdown plastics in the environment, and the ecological and human health implications of plastics and their by-products. Discover new innovations that may be instrumental in finding solutions to...
  • Q & A with Troy Langknecht, MS in Environmental Science and Policy

    Q & A with Troy Langknecht, MS in Environmental Science and Policy

    Q & A with Troy Langknecht, Environmental Science and Policy student.
  • These co-ops are taking part in creating the next model organism, one cephalopod at a time.

    These co-ops are taking part in creating the next model organism, one cephalopod at a time.

    It’s not every day you get the chance to work with cephalopods. That, however, is not the case for Northeastern students Sarah Beecy and Sonia van Stekelenborg. Beecy, a third-year marine biology student, and van Stekelenborg, a third-year environmental science student, are currently on their first co-op as marine cephalopod aquarists at Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. The MBL is a...
  • On co-op at The Food Project, she hopes to make a difference in the environmental justice field.

    On co-op at The Food Project, she hopes to make a difference in the environmental justice field.

    Sophia Samaha shares her experience as a College of Science student on co-op.
  • Is wildfire soot leaving a mark on the world’s oceans?

    Is wildfire soot leaving a mark on the world’s oceans?

    When clouds of smoke and ash billow out over the ocean, stretching away from the wildfires that are their source, they might not just affect the air quality. Rather, the wildfire soot could leave a chemical mark on the waters below. That’s the idea behind new research by Aron Stubbins, associate professor of marine and...
  • To safeguard key coastal ecosystems, this scientist starts by talking to the local anglers

    To safeguard key coastal ecosystems, this scientist starts by talking to the local anglers

    Marine and Environmental Sciences Professor, Steven Scyphers, works with anglers to take comprehensive look yet at greater amberjack populations.
  • How data from Hurricane Ida can help bolster levees, power infrastructure.

    How data from Hurricane Ida can help bolster levees, power infrastructure.

    Qin Jim Chen, professor of civil and environmental engineering, collects data from Hurricane Ida to save lives and help prevent flooding.
  • He cultivates the campus’s  ‘urban forest’ with an eye on the future.

    He cultivates the campus’s ‘urban forest’ with an eye on the future.

    It is a sticky, tropical day in August, making the Boston campus feel like an open-air blast furnace. Good thing Northeastern has nearly 1,500 trees to absorb some of the heat, or it could feel a lot worse, says Stephen Schneider, the university’s new chief arborist. “One of the more beneficial aspects of this urban...
  • If we don’t halt climate change, the world’s oceans may never be the same.

    If we don’t halt climate change, the world’s oceans may never be the same.

    The vast majority of the world’s oceans may never be the same if humanity doesn’t curb our carbon emissions. As much as 95% of the climates in the surface ocean that exist today could completely disappear within 80 years, according to new research led by Katie Lotterhos, associate professor of marine and environmental sciences at...
  • How the natural pigments in marine life inspired a beauty products startup

    How the natural pigments in marine life inspired a beauty products startup

    Camille Martin, PhD and assistant professor of Chemistry, Leila Deravi, developed Seaspire Skincare, a beauty product line drawn from marine ecosystems.
  • When a heatwave comes, this scientist takes a shellfish’s perspective

    When a heatwave comes, this scientist takes a shellfish’s perspective

    Brian Helmuth, marine science and public policy professor at Northeastern, and his team built "robomussels" and other temperature loggers in an effort to find refugia for the mussels dying as a result of record-setting heatwaves.
  • This robot is going to map uncharted kelp forests in the Arctic–and the impact of climate change

    This robot is going to map uncharted kelp forests in the Arctic–and the impact of climate change

    Professor of marine and environmental sciences at Northeastern, Mark Patterson, receives the Fulbright U.S. scholar award to further his research mapping uncharted kelp forests in the Canadian Arctic.