In The News: College of Sciences
51³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ’s College of Sciences turns 50 years old this year
The college is an umbrella over chemistry, geoscience, math, physics, water management and many more areas of high science.
Forty-two centuries ago, the flourishing Akkadian Empire—spread across modern-day Iraq, Turkey, and Syria—suddenly disappeared. Paleoclimatologists and other geoscientists now have one possible explanation for why. Using precisely age dated chemical measurements from a stalagmite collected in a cave in Iran, researchers found an abrupt uptick in dust at that point in history. This heightened dust activity, which persisted for 300 years, might have made for uncomfortable living conditions and difficulties in farming, the researchers suggest.
Researchers at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (51³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ) launched a public website called FoodGenesAndMe.com that uses computer software to scan users’ DNA for potential health problems and creates personalized diets to lower the risks.
Separate threads of Oscar Monterrosa’s life tied together Oct. 1, 2017, in Las Vegas.
His time as a combat medic in the Iraq War, his high school days as a lifeguard in Northern California and later Oregon, his studies at 51³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ, the classes he teaches and his job as a paramedic for Community Ambulance, a private paramedic company—all converged.
If you’ve taken a genealogy test, you can now find out what medical problems your genes make you vulnerable to, and how you can change your diet to keep yourself healthy. Food Genes and Me, a startup developed by 51³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ’s Nevada Institute of Personalized Medicine, offers a free service that lets you do just that.
Although helium is the second most abundant element in the universe, it is rare on Earth. Most of the gas is thought to reside deep underground.
No fantasy world is complete without fire-breathing dragons . But if dragons were real, how could they get that kind of fiery breath?
Stargazers could be in for a treat in tonight's northern sky.
In late November, citing potential disruption to aviation radar, mining claims, and natural vistas, the Bureau of Land Management turned down a Swedish company’s offer to build a 200-turbine wind farm outside of Searchlight. Nearby residents and bird advocates hated the plan, too.
Although space travel exposes astronauts to forms of radiation that are uncommon on Earth, and that are linked to cancers and heart problems, a U.S. study suggests this doesn’t significantly shorten their lives.
It’s known as the final frontier, and there are still so many questions. 51³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ researchers are hoping to unlock the answer to how planets form and are now one step closer after finding a group of young planets in distant solar systems.
As you wait in line to ship Christmas presents to far-flung family, mulling over questions of whether the FedEx insurance is a good value, and if fake or real Christmas trees are better for the environment, you might find yourself wondering, is any of this worth it? Why am I here? What happens if I die? What is the meaning of life?