News
- Theres no way were going to carry building materials to space, Dr. Srubar said. Well bring biology with us.
- The Mortenson Center is hosting the second annual Global Engineering Awards recognizing a professional and a student whose work aligns with the Mortenson Center's mission and vision. The nomination process is now open, and nominations will be accepted until January 31, 2020.
- Environmental engineering student Priscilla Jimenez was named the fall 2019 Outstanding Graduate for Service by the College of Engineering & Applied Science!
- With 2019 on pace as one of the warmest years on record, a major new study from an international team of researchers reveals how rapidly the Arctic is warming and examines global consequences of continued polar warming.
- Assistant professor encourages his students to adapt to rapidly changing technologies and take on large-scale issues such as climate change, with fresh perspectives.
- Professor John Crimaldi was recently elected to the 2019 class fellows of the Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography (ASLO)!
- Mauritz Mort Mortenson (CivEngr58), who passed away Nov. 9 at his home in Minneapolis, Minnesota, at age 82, leaves behind a deep personal and professional legacy, including endowing the Mortenson Center in Global Engineering.
- Watch the 9News interview of EVEN professor Joseph Ryan, regarding his research and PhD student Holly Millers findings of arsenic presence in unregulated and privately owned wells in Colorado.
- No matter where you are in the world, Professor Karl Linden wants you to be able to turn on a tap and receive clean drinking water. Its a basic, but vital, necessity thats still missing from large swathes of the U.S. and low- and middle-income countries.