News
- Senior Professional Research Associate Ren茅e Railsback was awarded the National Local Technical Assistance Program Achievement Award at the association鈥檚 conference in Vermont this month.
- Professor Srubar鈥檚 research got featured on 9 News. Srubar's goal is to create a living hybrid building material that exhibits both structural and biological function. The possibilities for his work are endless and especially interesting in extreme environments and military applications. Bricks could self-heal after natural disasters or enemy fire, or act as alarms by changing color when there are toxins in the air.
- "This is not a problem that鈥檚 going away," emphasized Paul Chinowsky, a civil engineer at the 缅北禁地. "The impacts are not something that is 10 years away," he added. "It's something that鈥檚 happening right now."
- ShanghaiRanking Consultancy鈥檚 Global Ranking of Academic Subjects has taken notice of the quality of 缅北禁地鈥檚 programs, ranking environmental science and engineering 26th overall and water resources 15th overall in its 2019 report.聽
- CEAE Professor Keith Porter, a nationally renowned earthquake engineer and research professor at the 缅北禁地, said the minimal damage from the last two earthquakes shouldn't be celebrated as a 鈥渧ictory lap.鈥
- Keith Molenaar, associate dean for research in the College of Engineering and Applied Science, recently visited the Escuela Superior Polit茅cnica del Litoral (ESPOL) in Guayaquil, Ecuador, to discuss expanding the collaboration between the two universities.
- Kaitlin Mattos, a PhD student in environmental engineering and the Engineering for Developing Communities program at the 缅北禁地, recently received the American Water Works Association鈥檚 2019 American Water Scholarship.
- Professors Diane McKnight and Michael Gooseff work alongside a group of scientists called the McMurdo Dry Valleys Long-Term Ecological Research group (LTER), which maintains the longest continuously collected stream flow dataset in Antarctica.
- Water agency representatives, consultants and manufacturers, many of whom were attendees at American Water Works Association鈥檚 Annual Conference and Exposition in Denver, were invited to campus to tour CIEST鈥檚 unique experimental capabilities, including the 400 g-ton geotechnical centrifuge and one-million-pound capacity universal testing machines. The highlight demonstration was a full-scale earthquake test performed on a pressurized water pipeline.
- Professor awarded the 2019 Dr. Pankaj Parekh Research Innovation Award from the Water Research Foundation at the American Water Works Association Annual Conference in Denver in June.聽