University of New Hampshire microbiologist Louis Tisa has received two grants totaling $498,115 to advance understanding of the actinorhizal plants, widespread woody plants with potential to enrich nutrient-poor and contaminated soils.
The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) awarded Tisa, a professor of molecular, cellular and biomedical sciences, $399,000 to explore the symbiotic relationship between the [...]
Two University of New Hampshire assistant professors — microbiologist Vaughn Cooper and mechanical engineer Christopher White — have received prestigious National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER grants. The grants aim to jump-start the careers of promising junior faculty, and the dollars, one million to Cooper and $400,000 to White, have certainly given their research efforts a [...]
Our preferences for specific popular movies, music, and classic art may predict personality traits and the lives we will lead, according to new research from the University of New Hampshire. According to UNH researchers Michael Faber and John Mayer, movies, books, music and other types of mass media use archetypal characters — the hero, the villain, the lover, etc. When people identity or “resonate” with a certain archetype, it may provide insight into their personalities and how they will live their lives.
Two University of New Hampshire energy efficiency programs – the New Hampshire Carbon Challenge and Carbon Solutions New England – have been awarded more than $953,000 from the New Hampshire Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction Fund (GHGERF) to further their efforts.
The New Hampshire Carbon Challenge (NHCC), a joint initiative of UNH and Clean Air-Cool Planet (CA-CP), received a two-year, $813,402 grant and will partner with the New Hampshire Sustainable Energy Association (NHSEA) to develop energy-efficiency, web-based tools that homeowners can use to reduce their energy usage.
For all those weather watchers in the Granite State, the University of New Hampshire and National Weather Service want you. The state has joined 44 other states using a network of community volunteers to measure precipitation. The project, the Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network (CoCoRaHS), is a joint effort of UNH and the [...]
Kudos to research professor Fred Short, who, along with several collaborators, was honored earlier this month with the prestigious Coastal America Partnership Award, the only environmental award of its kind given by the U.S. president.
In, apparently, a refreshing bit of win-win news, the University of New Hampshire announced this week that a study conducted by UNH’s Carbon Solutions New England (CSNE) shows that the New England region would get a $10-billion boost by 2025 under the new fuel economy standards announced by President Barack Obama in May. The money [...]
What do crop fires in Asia have to do with the melting Arctic? Quite a lot, it turns out. For two years, scientists – including UNH’s Jack Dibb of the Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans and Space (EOS) – looked at how pollutants from “down south” affected the Arctic. Known as POLARCAT, the [...]
As if the flooded streets and boarded-up windows weren’t enough, new research indicates that hurricanes could be contributing to global warming. UNH ecologist George Hurtt just published a study, along with Tulane University researchers, that looks at how hurricane damage can diminish a forest’s carbon dioxide-absorbing capacity. Carbon dioxide is, of course, a major contributor [...]
Increased social stress in childhood and young adulthood has a direct link to increased dating violence, according to new research conducted by Murray Straus, co-director of the UNH Family Research Laboratory and professor of sociology.
n theory, at least, this image shows every road in New Hampshire; demonstrating how paved-over we are in the southeast quadrant, compared to the relative blankness of the White Mountains. I think I see the Kancamagus and the Mount Washington Auto Road, but darned if I can spot, say, the F.E. Everett Turnpike.
Click here to see my Google map showing large-scale solar, wind, hydro and nuclear plants in and around N.H., plus some intriguing alternative-power items in the region.
About this blog
David Brooks has written a science column for the Nashua (N.H.) Telegraph since 1991 (see recent ones here). It is now in the Concord (N.H.) Monitor, as well. He has overseen this blog since 2006. (E-mail him or call 603-594-5831).
Also contributing:Earle Rich is a jack-of-many-trades engineer with experience in wind turbines.
Shareware Report - now, alas, retired.