In The News: School of Life Sciences

Seeker.com

The Curiosity rover made big news in late 2014 when it first detected organic matter on Mars. But in detailed studies of the sites in Gale Crater studied by Curiosity, called Yellowknife Bay and Sheepbed Mudstone, the concentration of organic molecules were much lower than scientists had expected.

KLAS-TV: 8 News Now

Motorists will be able to cruise a brand-new section of Interstate 11 next Tuesday. It's the Railroad Pass interchange and it will be open for business Feb. 20.

UNM Newsroom

Coming out of the last glacial period, there was a sudden climate reversal observed throughout the tropical and subtropical regions of the Earth. The cause of these changes during this interval so enigmatic, so much so, the interval was informally referred to as the “Mystery Interval.” Many large shifts in climates in the past seem to be synchronized with climate in the poles as expressed in ice core records.

KSNV-TV: News 3

“Is this something we’ve seen before?” We asked Dr. Josh Bonde. He grinned. “No, this is going to be something new.”

KSNV-TV: News 3

Sabertooth cats once roamed Las Vegas, mammoths towered over the valley, and now, you can see them.

Reno Gazette-Journal

For eons humans have gazed into the heavens and pondered the mysteries of the universe.

Las Vegas Review Journal

In Northern Nevada’s Great Boiling Spring, strange microscopic creatures thrive in water hot enough to kill you.

KSNV-TV: News 3

Tracing your family roots. It's research that can turn up all kinds of surprises, and maybe even links to famous ancestors.

Metroparks Toledo

Scott Abella began researching changes in plant life in the Oak Openings in 2002 as an undergraduate intern from Grand Valley State University in Michigan. Fifteen years later, Dr. Abella, assistant professor in the School of Life Sciences at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, continues his research on his summer breaks.

STAT News

Biologist Allen Gibbs calls them his “all-American flies.”

LiveScience

In a 2016 interview with CNN, Anthony Scaramucci — President Donald Trump's new White House communications director — said that Earth, as well as human history, is just 5,500 years old. But ample evidence exists to prove that the world has been around for much, much longer.

Science News for Students

For a half-century, scientists have debated whether animals can hibernate for as little as a day