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The School of Natural Resource’s exhibit, “Intertwined: Deciphering the Hidden Conversations Between Biota, Soil and Water,” was on display at Memorial Union on April 9 & 10, 2024, as part of Show-Me Research Week.
Photo by Christina Meier | © 2024 - Curators of the University of Missouri
L'Aber Estuary, Crozon Peninsula (Brittany, France), showing the impact of constructing a road causeway across an estuary. This image is a view of the causeway taken by Professor Simon Haslett in June 2004 during an undergraduate student geography field trip from Bath Spa University College. For further information, please see:
Haslett, S. K., 2008. Coastal Systems (2nd edition). Routledge, London and New York. In particular see Management Box 3.3 on pages 87-88. www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415440608/
Database Ref: 0109 June 2004
Scientists at Florida Gulf Coast University have been tracking water quality at the Everglades Wetland Research Park for years. To track the benefits of the wetlands on the region, researchers worked with NexSens Technology to create a wireless network of water quality sondes, pressure transducers and data loggers.
Read the full story: www.nexsens.com/case_studies/wetland-research-management.htm
Undergraduate students taking Broadcast Meteorology in the School of Natural Resources’ environmental science degree program film segments for Mizzou’s Campus Weather Forecast during the spring 2024 semester. These forecasts are filmed in the Weather Analysis and Visualization (WAV) Lab in the Anheuser-Busch Natural Resources Building.
Photo by Christina Meier | © 2024 - Curators of the University of Missouri
Atmospheric Science students attended SciFest: The Great Outdoors Expo at the St. Louis Science Center on April 6, 2024 to showcase their knowledge to the community.
Photo by Christina Meier | © 2024 - Curators of the University of Missouri
Students in Mr. Barton's Environmental Science class found an eastern box turtle on our property Oct. 7, 2025. This discovery was noteworthy because eastern box turtles are a species of special concern; it is illegal to remove them from the wild. The hatchling was relocated safely to a wooded area of campus. Nice job, Spartans!
Our Environmental Monitor staff was invited to participate in Ohio Sea Grant's 7th annual writers workshop at Stone Laboratory on Lake Erie.
On the second day of the workshop, we were taken out on a Research Cruise. Volunteers from the group, including Environmental Monitor editor Daniel Kelly, got to help with some sampling of Lake Erie's waters.
Read our interview with Chis Winslow, interim director of the Ohio Sea Grant, here:
Ferrum College Environmental Science faculty and students from ESC 103 and ESC 313 classes conducted their annual controlled burn in the warm season grass patch below Adams Lake on Thurs., Jan. 25, 2018.
Pails and seeds left over afte UW-Green Bay's Conservation Biology students seeded the east field at the Wequiock Creek Natural Area. UW-Green Bay, Sue Pischke University Photographer
Scientists at Florida Gulf Coast University have been tracking water quality at the Everglades Wetland Research Park for years. To track the benefits of the wetlands on the region, researchers worked with NexSens Technology to create a wireless network of water quality sondes, pressure transducers and data loggers.
Read the full story: www.nexsens.com/case_studies/wetland-research-management.htm
We went to the Lower Great Miami River with Wright State University scientists to get a first-hand look at their dual nutrient study. Silvia Newell collects a water sample upstream of an impoundment on the river.
Read more here:
www.fondriest.com/news/nitrogen-dynamics-in-the-field-wit...
In order to uphold drinking water standards, the City of Columbus worked with NexSens Technology to create a real-time source water monitoring system along the Hoover, Griggs and O'Shaughnessy Reservoirs. Data loggers collect data from various water quality sensors and transmit to a secure website where city employees can keep an eye on temperature, pH, conductivity, dissolved oxygen, turbidity and chlorophyll levels.
Read the full story: www.nexsens.com/case_studies/source_water_monitoring.htm
A view across the low-lying Somerset Levels and Bridgwater Bay as seen from the Summit of the Quantocks.
This photo is from:
S.K. Haslett (2010) Somerset Landscapes: Geology and Landforms. Blackbarn Books, 184pp.
Available from: www.amazon.co.uk/Somerset-Landscapes-Landforms-Simon-Hasl...
This photo is made available here by Professor Simon Haslett for educational purposes only. Permission to reuse must be obtained from the publisher in writing.
Database ref: 0433
Date taken: 1996
Scientists at Florida Gulf Coast University have been tracking water quality at the Everglades Wetland Research Park for years. To track the benefits of the wetlands on the region, researchers worked with NexSens Technology to create a wireless network of water quality sondes, pressure transducers and data loggers.
Read the full story: www.nexsens.com/case_studies/wetland-research-management.htm
Jackson, Taylor, Peter, and Luke hang out in the woods next to the Nature Lodge during their Environmental Science class
Scientists at Florida Gulf Coast University have been tracking water quality at the Everglades Wetland Research Park for years. To track the benefits of the wetlands on the region, researchers worked with NexSens Technology to create a wireless network of water quality sondes, pressure transducers and data loggers.
Read the full story: www.nexsens.com/case_studies/wetland-research-management.htm