7141 - 7160 van 9514 resultaten
- In Memoriam Prof. Ad de RooIt is with great sadness that we must inform you that Prof. Ad de Roo passed away on 26 September./en/news/in-memoriam-prof-ad-de-roo
- Two EGU Awards & Medals for Utrecht geoscientistsTjalling de Haas and Marc Bierkens win two 2023 EGU Awards & Medals./en/news/two-egu-awards-medals-for-utrecht-geoscientists
- Three-quarters of people living in river deltas not protected from floodsOnly about 17 percent of global deltas are well protected from floods, and more than 100 million people live outside protected areas./en/news/three-quarters-of-people-living-in-river-deltas-not-protected-from-floods
- When the glacier ice is gone, plants get to workAcross mountain regions, plants actively aid the stabilisation of unstable glacial sediments in a similar way, regardless of climate and plant species./en/news/when-the-glacier-ice-is-gone-plants-get-to-work
- Future-proofing the Dutch coastal systemProject WadSED is granted 2.8 million euros through NWO's Perspectief funding programme./en/news/future-proofing-the-dutch-coastal-system
- Rising river temperatures hold important clues about climate and other human impactsAn improved global understanding of river temperature could provide an important barometer for climate change and other human activities./en/news/rising-river-temperatures-hold-important-clues-about-climate-and-other-human-impacts
- Animal ecosystem engineers much stronger driver of salt marsh accretion than expected, study showsEcosystem engineering by mussels in Southeastern US salt marshes is a much stronger driver of accretion rates than expected./en/news/animal-ecosystem-engineers-much-stronger-driver-of-salt-marsh-accretion-than-expected-study-shows
- NWO Open Technology grant for research on the heritage of Dutch landscapesLooking back to plan ahead: the results of this project will enable future-proof planning and management of landscape and international heritage./en/news/nwo-open-technology-grant-for-research-on-the-heritage-of-dutch-landscapes
- Frozen past, unstable future: a warming climate's influence on mountain stabilityWhen, where and how many rocks detach from their mountain partially depends on the climate. How will a warming climate influence this in the future?/en/news/frozen-past-unstable-future-a-warming-climates-influence-on-mountain-stability
- Transitions in GeosimulationOn 11 October, Derek Karssenberg will hold his inaugural lecture./en/news/transitions-in-geosimulation
- Researchers from Utrecht ľ¹Ï¸£ÀûÓ°ÊÓ improve a web tool mapping global water challengesResearchers from Utrecht ľ¹Ï¸£ÀûÓ°ÊÓ have improved the World Resources Institute’s online Aqueduct 4.0 Water Risk Framework./en/news/researchers-from-utrecht-university-improve-a-web-tool-mapping-global-water-challenges
- Clearing mangroves makes ‘muddification’ worseClearing mangroves to stop estuaries getting clogged with mud actually makes the problem worse, new research shows./en/news/clearing-mangroves-makes-muddification-worse
- Triple trouble for mangrove coastsNew computer simulations show how mangrove forests get pushed against their shores and what causes the loss of their diversity./en/news/triple-trouble-for-mangrove-coasts
- Jaap Nienhuis receives the 2020 AGU Luna Leopold awardGeomorphologist Jaap Nienhuis receives the American Geophysical Union Earth and Planetary Surface Process Luna Leopold Award, and presents the Sharp Lecture./en/news/jaap-nienhuis-receives-the-2020-agu-luna-leopold-award
- Deep drilling in Europe's oldest and most species-rich lake provides new insights into evolutionCombination of the environmental and climate data of a 568-meter-long sediment core with the fossil records of over 150 endemic diatom species./en/news/new-insights-into-evolution-lake-ohrid
- New fossil evidence shows Australia’s oldest animals lived along the coastlineThe finding shows that these early organisms had already evolved traits to deal with waves and tidal currents on what was a turbulent coastline half a billion years ago./en/news/new-fossil-evidence-shows-australias-oldest-animals-lived-along-the-coastline
- ERC Advanced Grant for two Utrecht ľ¹Ï¸£ÀûÓ°ÊÓ researchersMarc Bierkens and Geert-Jan Boons have been awarded ERC Advanced grants of 2.5 million Euros to pursue ground-breaking, high-risk projects./en/news/erc-advanced-grant-for-two-utrecht-university-researchers
- Delta scientists report four ways to save deltas from sea level rise...Utrecht ľ¹Ï¸£ÀûÓ°ÊÓ assembled a team of specialists to investigated and review 'Sedimentation Enhancing Strategies'. They found four ways to keep deltas dry./en/news/delta-scientists-report-four-ways-to-save-deltas-from-sea-level-rise
- A better picture of our coastA day at the beach and at the same time contribute to research on our coast/en/news/a-better-picture-of-our-coast
- We built an algorithm to predict how climate change will affect future conflict in the Horn of Africa: here’s what we foundResearchers from Utrecht ľ¹Ï¸£ÀûÓ°ÊÓ have developed a machine learning model to predict how climate change may affect future conflicts./en/news/we-built-an-algorithm-to-predict-how-climate-change-will-affect-future-conflict-in-the-horn-of