COS News

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    a sea spider
    Connie Phong wants to know how an animal adapted to live in a highly specialized environment — just below the freezing point for seawater — responds to warming oceans.

    How Northeastern scientists are using Antarctic sea spiders to study life on the edge

  • News
    Fleury Augustin Nsole Biteghe has identified a way to target two of the deadliest cancer types with chemotherapy drugs but without the harms associated with chemotherapy.

    Northeastern researcher uses light to target and kill cancer cells

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    Showing 190 results in Marine and Environmental Sciences

  • #YouAreWelcomeHere – A Safe Space For All

    #YouAreWelcomeHere – A Safe Space For All

    The You Are Welcome Here (YAWH) campaign is an initiative to display acceptance and support for LGBTQIA+ members of the Marine and Environmental Sciences (MES) community.
  • How We Can All ‘Accelerate Change’ This World Water Day: Q&A with Professor James Dennedy-Frank

    How We Can All ‘Accelerate Change’ This World Water Day: Q&A with Professor James Dennedy-Frank

    James Dennedy-Frank, assistant professor of marine and environmental sciences and civil and environmental engineering, sat down to speak about World Water Day, which falls on March 22. Professor Dennedy-Frank leads the Water Resources Ecohydrology Lab at Northeastern — their work helps us understand the function of watersheds as they bring together meteorological forcing, geological settings, […]
  • California is once again being deluged by atmospheric rivers. What are they and will climate change make them worse?

    California is once again being deluged by atmospheric rivers. What are they and will climate change make them worse?

    California is once again being deluged by atmospheric rivers that have unleashed major flooding across the state, with river number 12 scheduled to dump more precipitation the week of March 19.
  • Recreational fishermen could be ‘untapped allies’ in the fight against climate change, Northeastern research says

    Recreational fishermen could be ‘untapped allies’ in the fight against climate change, Northeastern research says

    A recent study by Northeastern marine biologists says there’s an overlap between the two groups that could be the start of a new conversation about protecting the environment—and combating climate change.
  • Narrative | Ocean Genome Legacy || Cataloguing the Oceans

    Narrative | Ocean Genome Legacy || Cataloguing the Oceans

    “By volume, about 99 percent of the habitable portion of our planet is underwater,” says Dan Distel, who directs Northeastern’s Ocean Genome Legacy Center. To explore and preserve the wealth of information contained in the ocean, the center collects DNA samples—over 28,000 so far—and has made that collection available to researchers around the world.
  • The fungal zombies in HBO’s ‘The Last of Us’ are based on real, horrifying biology

    The fungal zombies in HBO’s ‘The Last of Us’ are based on real, horrifying biology

    In the premiere of HBO’s big budget video game adaption “The Last of Us,” a scientist on a 1960s Dick Cavett-like talk show raises the idea that a fungal, not viral, infection will spell the end of humanity. On the surface, it’s laughable, and the idea is met with bemused laughter by the host and audience. But as the scientist explains his theory, the energy in the room slowly shifts from amusement to horror.
  • Why it’s crucial that scientists lend, not toss, specimens from Antarctica

    Why it’s crucial that scientists lend, not toss, specimens from Antarctica

    Not everybody can travel to Antarctica for months at a time to study the continent’s unique ecology, flora and fauna. Now two Northeastern University professors are among those calling for the establishment of an Antarctic biorepository to make sure that any serious researcher who wants to study the birds, animals, plants and microorganisms of the polar south gets a chance to do so.
  • Are volcanoes impacted by climate change? Or is it the other way around?

    Are volcanoes impacted by climate change? Or is it the other way around?

    While a study of Iceland proposes a possible link, scientists at Northeastern University say the effect of volcanic activity on global warming is minimal.
  • Northeastern entrepreneurs dominate list of innovators and leaders on BostInno’s ‘25 Under 25’

    Northeastern entrepreneurs dominate list of innovators and leaders on BostInno’s ‘25 Under 25’

    BostInno’s 25 Under 25 is a class of elite young founders, nonprofit leaders, startup employees and students.
  • Shipworms can sink a boat. Northeastern researchers explain digestive process

    Shipworms can sink a boat. Northeastern researchers explain digestive process

    Known as the clam that has sunk a thousand ships, shipworms are strange looking—and strange acting—animals.
  • Northeastern student’s climate research co-op on Mount Everest a ‘spectacular experience’

    Northeastern student’s climate research co-op on Mount Everest a ‘spectacular experience’

    Alexander Anderson’s co-op included a grueling two-week trek from the Khumbu region of Nepal to Everest Base Camp with the Himalayan Climate and Science Institute to support the installation of the world’s highest weather station.
  • The Desert Dialogue: Q&A With Caterina Wang

    The Desert Dialogue: Q&A With Caterina Wang

    Caterina Wang, a recent graduate of Khoury College of Computer Science, completed her studies at Northeastern while on a Dialogue of Civilizations Program held in the desert of Israel: “SUSTAINABLE LIVING IN A HARSH DESERT ENVIRONMENT”.