Media Coverage

  • Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Stuck in the muck: Scientists study carbon trapped by Elkhorn Slough

    Scientists are measuring how much carbon dioxide Elkhorn Slough can suck from the atmosphere. Their research is funded by a $3.5 million grant awarded in 2022 by the University of California Office of the President. It is part of a broader effort to find ways to remove greenhouse gasses from the atmosphere. “Wetlands are one…

  • CleanTechnica

    CleanTechnica

    Earthquake And Remembrance: The Tsunami Of 2004

    Some of the answers could be forthcoming under a research project at the University of California, Santa Cruz, where professor Emily Brodsky is working on a $1.1 million Department of Energy grant aimed at studying the potential to induce earthquakes from different kinds of human activity including geothermal wells and groundwater management systems as well…

  • Scientific American

    Scientific American

    Should Offshore Oil Rigs Be Turned into Artificial Reefs?

    Mark Carr of the University of California, Santa Cruz, wrote that there are few natural rock reefs at the depths of the California oil platforms and none with comparable physical characteristics. If the goal is to contribute to overall reef area, their value is “minuscule.” If, however, the intent is to preserve their unique habitats,…

  • Smithsonian

    Smithsonian Magazine

    Voyager 2 Measured a Rare Anomaly When It Flew Past Uranus, Skewing Our Knowledge of the Planet for 40 Years, Study Suggests

    “The Uranus system is one of the big blank spots that are left on our map,” said Francis Nimmo, a planetary scientist at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

  • Artforum

    Artforum

    Dreams of Dakar

    Artforum, one of the world's leading art magazines, highlighed the work of UC Santa Cruz Humanities Professor Gina Athena Ulysse in its story about the prestigious Dakar Biennale (Dak'Art). A featured artist at the Biennale, Ulysse, a prolific Haitian-American scholar and artist, has a vibrant installation on the facade of the Ancien Palace de Justice, where…

  • Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Santa Cruz Sentinel

    UC Santa Cruz Theater Arts lives up to a smart adaptation of Nikolai Gogol’s ‘Inspector General’

    Professor and Chair of the Department of Performance, Play & Design Michael Chemers reimagined the classic Russian play Inspector General for a new era. Santa Cruz Sentinel writer Jake Thomas gives the play a stunning review, in large due to its "ability to inspire reflection." Inspector General will be playing until the end of this…

  • Broadway World

    Broadway World

    World Premiere of ‘Here Comes the Night’ to Open at Moving Arts Theatre

    UC Santa Cruz alumna Hailey McAfee, who graduated with a B.A. in Theater Arts, is currently directing a new play. Here Comes the Night is set to premiere in Los Angeles in January and run through mid-February.

  • Allure

    Allure

    We’re Much Closer to A Disney Princess With Type 4 Hair

    A.M. Darke, a UC Santa Cruz professor of Performance, Play, and Design, recently released a paper with a colleague from Yale focusing on their research in animating coily hair. Animation didn’t even include texture in Black hair until 2021 with Disney’s Encanto. Darke’s research is game changing in the field of animation and will lead to…

  • San Francisco Chronicle

    San Francisco Chronicle

    A mysterious deep-sea creature appeared in Monterey Bay. Now scientists are finally telling the world

    In 2000, a team of scientists first laid eyes on what they would later call the Mystery Mollusk via a remotely operated vehicle at 8,576 feet. After 150 viewings, many rounds of measurements, some genetic studies and 24 years later, a scientific description of the animal with the scientific name Bathydevius caudactylus has been published.…

  • Modesto Bee

    Modesto Bee

    S.F.’s Ocean Beach could be transformed with massive seawall. Surfers are not happy

    An upcoming scientific article about the impact of development on California beaches by geologist Gary Griggs of UC Santa Cruz and coastal engineer Bob Battalio called armoring and repeated beach nourishment solutions that are expensive and only "effective over a few decades at best."

  • Australian Broadcasting Network

    Australian Broadcasting Network

    Composing music with AI isn't new, but recent advances have serious implications for the music industry

    As AI quickly advances there are a lot of questions about its ethics. But whether it is good or bad there is no denying that AI plays a major role in the future of music making. One of the early pioneers of AI music was David Cope, a UC Santa Cruz professor emeritus of music.…

  • Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Santa Cruz Sentinel

    UC Santa Cruz’s ‘Inspector General’ updates classic political play

    The UC Santa Cruz Arts Division is premiering a new play this week. Inspector General, which is an adaption of a Russian play by the same name, raises a conversation around political corruption in the modern day. The Santa Cruz Sentinel spoke to Michael Chemers, the chair of the department of Performance, Play, and Design who…

Last modified: Nov 25, 2024