From her lab on campus, environmental geology major Emily Weaver 鈥20 (Auburn, N.Y.) details her work, which focuses on a faraway destination: the Galapagos Islands.
To hear chemistry professor Ernie Nolen talk about it, understanding chemistry is the easiest thing in the world, once you enter the right frame of mind. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 who I am,鈥 he says, pointing to a diagram of an organic molecule tacked to his office wall. Technically, he is correct 鈥 the molecules Nolen studies make [鈥
With a little help from NNSA, Professor Karen Harpp has successfully brought the past to life for her undergraduate class studying The Advent of the Atomic Bomb.
In the early, wintery weeks of 2018, Adams and geology major Monica Dimas 鈥19 (Los Angeles, Calif.) traveled together on a research expedition to Tanzania. There, they planted a seismometer to capture data that describe the moving and shaking around 鈥渢he mountain of the gods,鈥 Ol Doinyo Lengai.
Associate Professor of Biology Engda Hagos and seven current and former students have co-authored an article that was recently published in the journal Cell Communication & Adhesion. The paper, titled 鈥淜r眉ppel-like factor 4 mediates cellular migration and invasion by altering RhoA activity,鈥 explores cancer cell invasion. Invasion and metastases are a spreading of cancer cells [鈥
Colgate Professor of Geography and Environmental Studies Ellen Percy Kraly has been named as one of the 2018 WCNY Makers: Women Who Make America, for her work with refugee populations in Utica, N.Y., and at the United Nations. 鈥淢y teaching at colgate has always been connected communities and introduce our students to community leaders. I [鈥
Weston Testo 鈥12 arrived at Colgate as an undergraduate in 2008, the same year that James 鈥淓ddie鈥 Watkins joined Colgate's faculty in the Department of Biology. In the 10 years since, Testo has grown from one of Watkins鈥檚 undergraduate students to one of his trusted colleagues.
Growing up in Hong Kong, Stephanie Wu 鈥18 hardly thought about race at all. When she came to the United States to study psychology at Colgate, she was in for a new experience. 鈥淢y race was suddenly so salient,鈥 Wu said. That profound shift in the way Wu experienced her racial identity has prompted her [鈥
Assistant Professor of Geology Joe Levy and his students are using NASA grant funding and images taken from the Mars Orbiter Mission to study glaciers on the red planet in an effort to further understand how that planet鈥檚 climate has changed throughout history. Images provided by the orbiter are of such high resolution that researchers on [鈥
At the annual research symposium of the Keck Northeast Astronomy Consortium, hosted by Colgate on Oct. 21, students from eight liberal arts universities gathered to present their summer research findings.