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News archive for Faculty of Science and Technology

Lea Svendsen was at first surprised to see how the Pacific impacted winter temperatures in the Arctic. Now, her results have been published in Nature Climate Change, while the Pacific transitions into a warm phase again.
Women are given a special mission of carrying life in its early and most vulnerable stages. Pregnancy, giving birth, breast-feeding, child care and everything that accompanies them are a normal part of life. Nature has decided that we are in our most fruitful age at the same time as we build our careers. Do we have to choose or is it possible to have it all? Global development is depending on... Read more
The Arctic is about to shrink, shows a new study, as an important part of the Arctic Ocean shifts over to an Atlantic climate regime. The rapid climate shift occurs in the northern Barents Sea鈥攖he Arctic warming hotspot where the surface warming and loss of winter sea ice is largest in the entire Arctic.
Read about all the highlights from the spring semester
Can the financial sector be a powerful force in tackling climate change?
I remember reading the following sentence in the announcement of my current post-doc position as part of the dCod project: 鈥淭he work will involve close collaboration with research groups both from biology and from mathematics鈥. I thought it was an interesting ambition, but I wasn鈥檛 sure how close would this collaboration be and how would it be organized. I guess the scheduled biweekly dCod... Read more
Over the course of three days (9-11 May), seven BCCR and Ice2Ice researchers participated in a glacier safety course on the Folgefonna glacier.
GEO had a strong showing at the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG) Annual Convention and Exhibition held in Salt Lake City, 20-23 May.
Some notes from the Utah course GEOV352
In their very first meeting, the board of聽The Norwegian Marine University Consortium (NMUC) had talks with the executives from聽the European Marine Board.聽聽The next step is to shape the consortium into a vital bridgehead for cooperation with the EU.
The first AQUACOSM group has arrived at UiB's Marine Biological Station. The international team of scientists are here to study the coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi.
Ferries and fast passenger boats in Western Norway could run on hydrogen produced from waste in the future!
Former EECRG Professor II Kathy Willis has been appointed as the next Principal (=Master or Head of House) of St Edmund Hall, one of the University of Oxford's colleges.
An international research team led by Uni Research Environment and the University of Bergen will explore how filter-feeding zooplankton can trap, ingest, disperse and potentially preserve virus particles in the marine environment.
Understanding the structure and relationships of biomolecules is important for discovering new medicines and materials. Three-dimensional bimolecular structures are often geometrically complex making it difficult to predict functional properties of molecules based on their structures. Recently, the new field of topological data analysis has shown some promise in improving the prediction of... Read more
Small fish have huge potential to alleviate malnutrition and safeguard food security in Sub-Saharan Africa and across the globe. An interdisciplinary project headed by the University of Bergen has been awarded 1 million Euros.

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