A University of Florida geophysicist discusses the strange changes in shifting ground during a long-term study of the 1960 Chile earthquake.
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JoinedJanuary 18, 2017
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The supply chains for common household items — like cleaning supplies or hardware — have had difficulties before the COVID-19 global pandemic.
Now that a respiratory virus has made us fearful of passing each other in grocery store aisles and caused the masked among us to gaze reproachfully at the unmasked, suddenly, breathing seems complicated.
UF Geography lecturer Gabriela Hamerlinck debuted a new class for Fall 2019: Pandemics. As the semester began, she was lecturing about history – the plagues of prehistory and the Black Death. By the end of the semester, current events were about to catch up with her lesson plan.
When you stocked up supplies for quarantine, you likely checked several items off your hurricane preparation kit list as well. That head start will come in handy as hurricane season elbows its way into the pandemic in progress.
Writer August Lah used to joke that she spent more than half her day in a coffee house.
A University of Florida physics professor is the recipient of the 2020 J.J. Sakurai Prize for Theoretical Physics from the American Physical Society.
Implicit biases, or biases that may be hidden, reveal the way test-takers associate people with words in positive or negative ways.
Alligator mating season has arrived along with warmer weather, but this year, the alligators pretty much have all 2,000 acres of campus to themselves.
By studying the way wildlife are hunted, researchers discuss the economics that help inform policy makers.
Linguistics team studies the benefits of speaking multiple languages
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