-
There's a lot less property in the northtowns contaminated by Tonawanda Coke than expected, according to a new study conducted by University at Buffalo and SUNY Fredonia chemists.
-
The new 400 Years of African American History Commission is designed to bring people together through events, activities and educational research to highlight contributions by Africans and African Americans to the country and to New York State.
-
Working with MIT, Purdue, Penn State and Georgia Tech, the University at Buffalo has a five-year, $5 million research program to determine better ways of spotting what is out there in space.
-
After that long test project in Erie County, a University at Buffalo lab that has been studying local COVID rates by testing sewer wastewater is expanding into Niagara, Chautauqua, Cattaraugus and Allegany counties.
-
The University at Buffalo has been awarded a grant to help mobile food markets improve their efficiency and sustainability. The announcement coincides with the release of a study which suggests people living with food scarcity during the COVID pandemic have experienced twice the level of mental health issues than their counterparts who have been able to find their next meal with little difficulty.
-
A doctor who did health research on Buffalo's West Side when a faculty member at the University at Buffalo's Jacobs Medical School now has one of the most important positions in the national health care system.
-
University at Buffalo students and a new rehabilitation center near Buffalo Niagara International Airport are combining to provide better care for people with spinal cord injuries.
-
University at Buffalo researchers are working on techniques to freeze-dry COVID-19 vaccines so they can be shipped into areas where refrigeration isn't common.
-
UB researchers, in a recent study, worked with two local supermarkets to examine their plastic bag recycling boxes. A professor and two grad students went through the boxes and found much of the material in the boxes was unusable because of contamination.
-
Scientists are learning more and more about how much the fate of trees is determined by what you don't see: the moisture around the roots.