Media Coverage

  • San Francisco Chronicle

    San Francisco Chronicle

    Stunning art and design books that celebrate Bay Area talent

    Acclaimed artist, filmmaker, and Distinguished Professor of The Arts and History of Consciousness Isaac Julien was featured in a story by arts writer Tony Bravo about new books focusing on design and culture.

  • Pop Mech logo

    Popular Mechanics

    A ‘Third State’ Exists Between Life and Death—And That Suggests Your Cells Are Conscious, Some Scientists Say

    “This is nothing new,” University of California, Santa Cruz plant biologist Lincoln Taiz, PhD and co-author of the letter, said in an email.

  • Yahoo News logo

    Yahoo News

    First elephant seal pup of the season born in SLO County.

    Supermoms account for more than half (55%) of the total pups born. Supermoms live longer, breed more frequently and raise bigger pups. Bernie LeBoeuf, now professor emeritus at UC Santa Cruz, led a research team that identified Supermoms in a 2019 scientific paper. Gingerbread’s mother chose a nice dry spot on the south beach.

  • Monterey County Herald "H" logo

    Monterey County Herald

    Residents near Moss Landing fire provide samples to measure health impact

    UC Santa Cruz toxicology professor Donald Smith says hair samples submitted by the Moss Landing community will contribute to a growing body of toxicology research. Smith’s lab will analyze the hair samples for manganese concentrations, but cannot yet interpret those results to connect exposure to symptoms without more long-term data.

  • National Geographic logo of yellow rectangle against black background

    National Geographic

    Watch orcas and dolphins team up to hunt—a possible scientific first

    “In nature, mutualism—where both parties benefit—is the most likely reason that you would have two disparate groups coming together,” says Ari Friedlaender, professor of ocean sciences at UC Santa Cruz, who wasn’t involved in the study. Additional coverage in Smithsonian magazine.

  • Discover Magazine logo

    Discover Magazine

    Why Brown Dwarfs May Explain the Main Differences Between Stars and Planets

    The atmospheres of brown dwarfs can be surprisingly similar to those of gas giant planets, too, complete with multi-layered clouds and powerful wind-driven storms. That makes them great windows into the atmospheric processes that shape our own solar system’s giant planets, as well as the super-Jupiter exoplanets discovered outside our stellar neighborhood, according to a…

  • SFGATE logo

    SFGate

    Which fault line do you live on? An earthquake guide for California.

    While both the northern and southern sections of the San Andreas fault are locked, storing up energy that needs to be released, the central part is creeping and less charged.”The true nightmare scenario is that the southern San Andreas has so much extra energy in it because it’s so overdue that it blows through the…

  • The Guardian

    The Guardian

    Trump’s pardon of an ex-Honduran president is shocking. So is the history of US support for him

    Dana Frank, research professor and professor emerita of history, wrote an opinion article about the recent pardon of Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernández and how the Obama, Trump, and Biden administrations stood by him for the eight vicious, destructive years he was in power

  • San Francisco Chronicle

    The Chronicle Of Higher Education

    The Surveilled Classroom

    Professor of Literature Jody Greene was quoted in a story about professors and students who are worried that what they say in class could end up on the internet.

  • National Geographic logo of yellow rectangle against black background

    National Geographic

    Learning a second language can protect your brain. Here’s how.

    Assistant Professor of Languages and Applied Linguistics Ariel Chan contributed to a National Geographic article exploring the ways in which speaking multiple languages can slow the aging process in the brain.

Last modified: Apr 02, 2025