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News Archives

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  1. 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû
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News Archives

EnergyFood SystemsToxicology
  • News

    A team of Nicholas School graduate students conducted field research in Barbados to advance a project aimed at improving climate resilience and energy access for Small Island Developing States.
  • A photo of two faculty members looking out over stylized mountains and the hint of an energy grid
    News

    Nicholas Narratives: Earthly Business

    At the Nicholas School of the Environment, researchers and entrepreneurs are joining forces to solve environmental problems.
  • News

    Because most seafood is imported, tariffs will cause Americans to eat less heart-healthy seafood and more heart-unhealthy red meat.
  • News

  • News

  • An image of the Salar de Uyuni, which looks like a vast plain of confectioner's sugar. A vehicle is parked in the distance.
    News

    Examining the Potential Environmental Effects of Mining the World’s Largest Lithium Deposit

    A trove of lithium-rich brine exists underground in Bolivia. Researchers conducted the first comprehensive chemical analysis of wastewater associated with mining the resource.
  • Workers at small-scale fishery
    News

    Small-Scale Fisheries Essential to Global Nutrition, Livelihoods

    Small-scale fisheries play a significant but overlooked role in global fisheries production and are key to addressing hunger and malnutrition while supporting livelihoods around the world, according to research featured on the cover of Nature.
  • News

    Kidney disease is typically linked to conditions like diabetes and high blood pressure, which gradually wear down the kidneys’ delicate systems that keep the body in balance. But the communities that 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû researchers Nishad Jayasundara , PhD, and nephrologist Anna Strasma , MD, study are facing a different problem.
  • Hunt Lab members aboard R/V Shearwater
    News

    NSOE Lab of the Month: Hunt Lab

    Meet the Hunt Lab, learn more about its research focus, a lab member's experience in the lab and the opportunities the lab offers Duke students.
  • Dalia Patino-Echeverri and lab members on Grainger Hall roof
    News

    NSOE Lab of the Month: Patino-Echeverri Lab

    Meet the Patino-Echeverri Lab, learn more about its research focus, lab member's experiences in the lab and the opportunities the lab offers Duke students.
  • Stapleton Lab members at DIOXIN
    News

    NSOE Lab of the Month: Stapleton Lab

    Meet the Stapleton Lab, learn more about its research focus, a postdoc's experience in the lab and the opportunities the lab offers Duke students.
  • US Troops in the Persian Gulf War (1991) – U.S. Department of Defense
    News

    Gulf War Illness Significantly Reduces White Blood Cells’ Ability to Make Energy

    Gulf War Illness (GWI), which affects approximately 250,000 U.S. veterans, has been found to significantly reduce the ability of white blood cells to make energy and creates a measurable biochemical difference in veterans who have the disease. The finding comes from a physician who noticed GWI symptoms paralleled those of mitochondrial diseases. Analysis revealed significantly lower levels of extracellular acidification and oxygen consumption in the white blood cells of veterans with GWI.
  • Xavier Basurto headshot
    News

    Self-Governance for Sustainability in Coupled Human-Natural Systems

    Xavier Basurto is broadly interested in how people in small communities successfully organize themselves for collective action. His recent talk described his work in advancing the understanding of non-colonialist sustainability science: the prospects and limitations of self-organization, or self-governance, for social-ecological sustainability, particularly in the Global South.
  • Lee Ferguson
    News

    The Next Frontier in Forever Chemicals: Environmental Implications of Clean Energy

    As the world endeavors to extricate itself from a carbon economy in favor of clean energy, Lee Ferguson is working to shed light on the potential environmental risks posed by bis-perfluoroalkyl sulfonimides, a primary electrolyte in lithium-ion batteries.
  • Young child tended to by woman
    News

    Prenatal Exposure to Lead Linked to Lower Birth Weights, Earlier Births in Gold Mining Communities

    A new study on the impacts of prenatal exposure to toxic metals linked to artisanal gold mining and other sources in Madre de Dios, Peru, finds that mercury has no direct effect on a newborn’s birth weight or gestational age. It’s a different story, though, for lead, which may also be released by mining operations but more likely is consumed when people eat wild game that inadvertently still contains small bullet fragments.

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Research area

  • Atmospheric Science
  • Climate Change
  • Ecology & Conservation
  • Economics, Policy & Governance
  • (-) Energy
  • Environmental Health
  • (-) Food Systems
  • Forests
  • Geosciences
  • Oceans
  • Sustainability
  • Technology
  • (-) Toxicology
  • Urban Environment
  • Water
  • Wetlands
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