Aerial view of CU Boulder main campus, with Flatirons behind

A message for our International Students from CIRES, INSTAAR, Geology leadership

July 13, 2020

Statement in support of international students and against the recent ICE guidance barring students from the U.S. who take online-only classes.

Students walk in all directions in front of building at Harvard University.

Schools scramble to keep students in wake of 鈥渄evastating鈥 new visa rule (Eos)

July 9, 2020

The United States has always been a scientific powerhouse, but following a sudden announcement from ICE, some worry that 鈥渨e鈥檙e just going to get so far behind.鈥 Eos story quotes INSTAAR doctoral student Lina P茅rez-Angel.

Flames burn in the foreground as smoke eddies through treetops in the background during a wildfire in the Irkutsk region of Russia.

Rapid Arctic meltdown in Siberia alarms scientists (Washington Post)

July 3, 2020

Merritt Turetsky is quoted in a Washington Post story on the record-setting heat wave across Siberia that is leading to massive wildfires and permafrost melt.

Penguin on ice floe

The South Pole feels Pacific heat

June 29, 2020

In a "news and views" piece in Nature Climate Change, INSTAAR Sharon Stammerjohn and CIRES researcher Ted Scambos spell out the evidence and consequences of rapid warming at the South Pole and call for action to 鈥渇latten the curve鈥 of global carbon emissions.

The American buildings of the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station are stark black boxes on a white snowy ground. Photo by Vicki Beaver/Alamy.

Even the South Pole is warming, and quickly, scientists say (New York Times)

June 29, 2020

Surface air temperatures at the bottom of the world have risen three times faster than the global average since the 1990s. Sharon Stammerjohn (INSTAAR) and Ted Scambos (NSIDC) are quoted about their commentary in Nature Climate Change.

Close view of permafrost soil, covered in mosses and puddles.

Why a 鈥榝everish鈥 Arctic will affect everyone on the globe (PBS News Hour)

June 26, 2020

A historic heat wave is occurring in the Arctic, already the fastest-warming place on Earth due to the increasing accumulation of greenhouse gases. Dr. Merritt Turetsky has studied the Arctic for decades. She joins William Brangham on PBS NewsHour to discuss causes and consequences of the Arctic's rising temperatures.

INSTAAR Chad Wolak prepares air samples for carbon-14 measurement. Photo by Scott Lehman.

Radioactive bookkeeping of carbon emissions (Eos)

June 24, 2020

A new sampling method uses carbon-14 to single out which carbon dioxide molecules in the atmosphere derive from fossil fuels. The method could help track emissions goals for climate mitigation.

The corner of a Russian apartment building is collapsed from uneven permafrost thaw in Chersky. Photo by Vladimir Romanovsky, University of Alaska Fairbanks

The ticking time bomb of Arctic permafrost (Eos)

June 24, 2020

Arctic infrastructure is under threat from thawing permafrost, explains this story in Eos featuring Merritt Turetsky.

Mural of George Floyd's face surrounded by flowers

INSTAAR statement on systemic racism

June 19, 2020

We recognize that Black Lives Matter and stand with the protesters demonstrating against injustice. We are also reckoning with the overdue realization that we are part of the same systems that led to that violence. We commit to doing our part to dismantle implicit, systemic racism in our own spaces and list specific actions we will take within INSTAAR.

Chad Wolak prepares NOAA air samples for carbon-14 measurement.

Tracking fossil fuel emissions with carbon-14

June 1, 2020

Researchers from NOAA and the University of Colorado have devised a breakthrough method for estimating national emissions of carbon dioxide from fossil fuels using ambient air samples and a well-known isotope of carbon scientists have relied on for decades to date archaeological sites. In a paper published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, they report the first-ever national scale estimate of fossil-fuel derived carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions obtained by observing CO2 and its naturally occurring radioisotope, carbon-14, from air samples collected by NOAA鈥檚 Global Greenhouse Gas Reference Network.

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