Featured Articles

Singing in a Silent Spring

Birds respond to a half-century soundscape reversion during the COVID-19 shutdown When the novel coronavirus swept across the country, forcing most businesses to close their ...Read More

The Neutron Star Frontier

Although he was interested in astrophysics at a young age, Andrew Steiner was never a big telescope person. Growing up, he preferred books by science giants, such as Carl ...Read More

Systems Deep Dive

Rachel Patton McCord’s interest in science is in her genes. She learned how to be curious about the natural world and how it works from her parents, who were both ...Read More

Mission: Outreach

UT geography students in the GIS Outreach and Community Engagement Lab are bridging the gap between the knowledge of geography and geospatial technology and the need for ...Read More

Lifetime of a Brain

The human brain weighs a little more than three pounds and makes up about two percent of a human’s body weight. It contains more than 80 billion nerve cells and billions of ...Read More

National History Day

History leaps off the pages of books and into the lives of middle and high school students during National History Day, a year-long education program for middle and high ...Read More

Studying the Memory of War

Memory creates powerful narratives that inform several aspects of a nation’s identity. During the summer of 2018, undergraduate students at UT will travel to Europe and ...Read More

Hellbenders Revealed

Snot otter. Mud devil. Grampus. Walking catfish. Lasagna lizard. These are not the most flattering nicknames, but they are the ones that stuck to Cryptobranchus ...Read More
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