News release — list

A photo of Julie Gosse

Gosse leads NIH-funded study into how CPC inhibits immune cell function  

Investigating how a common antibacterial ingredient in many foods, personal care, and cleaning products inhibits immune cell function that is harmful to human health is the focus of a National Institutes of Health-funded study at the University of Maine.  In a recent study co-authored by toxicologist Julie Gosse, a UMaine associate professor of biochemistry, her […]

Read more

Research Learning Experiences return to UMaine this fall

The University of Maine is once again offering Research Learning Experiences — courses that allow first- and second-year students to engage in research and other forms of hands-on learning at the start of their college careers — this fall.  About 400 students signed up to participate in UMaine’s 24 distinct RLEs, 21 for first-year students […]

Read more

A photo of Alex Rose using nanocellulose in her art

Intermedia students are creating art with nanocellulose

Editor’s note: Intermedia students’ nanocellulose art will be on public display on Aug. 24 from 4:30–6:30 p.m. at the Wells Conference Center. Nanocellulose is a malleable material. In a mixture that is 97% water, nanocellulose looks like yogurt or paste. When freeze-dried, it has the consistency of Styrofoam. Fully dried, it’s like a plastic tile.  […]

Read more

UMaine awarded NSF MRI grant to update instrumentation for climate, environment, ecosystem and engineering research

The National Science Foundation (NSF) awarded a $661,462 Major Research Instrumentation (MRI) grant to the University of Maine to upgrade a multiuser instrument in the Climate Change Institute. Over the last two decades, the University of Maine Climate Change Institute’s ICP-MS facility has conducted valuable climate, environmental, ecosystem and engineering research and training across the […]

Read more

A photo of research instruments in the snow

Haëntjens returns from studying phytoplankton-sea ice interactions in North Pole

Nils Haëntjens, research assistant professor in the University of Maine’s School of Marine Sciences, has just returned from a two-week trip to the North Pole to study phytoplankton distributions in relation to sea ice properties on-board the cruise vessel Le Commandant Charcot.  The vessel, which is also an ice breaker, was on its first voyage with passengers […]

Read more

A photo of a fall forest in Maine

Fraver part of NSF-funded research on methane sinks in Maine forest 

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded $1.65 million across a team of researchers at five institutions that includes Shawn Fraver, associate professor of forest ecology at the University of Maine School of Forest Resources, to study methane sinks in Northern Forests. The total award to UMaine is $239,679.  Methane is second only to carbon dioxide […]

Read more

A photo of Anne Knowles

Knowles developing website to tell the story of Holocaust victims through places

Anne Knowles believes that places provide important information about historical events. The University of Maine professor and graduate coordinator in the History Department has made an academic career studying the relationship between geographical circumstances and major societal shifts, exploring topics from Welsh emigration to the United States to why American entrepreneurs struggled to match the […]

Read more

A group Sea Fellows students stand outside of the Downeast Institute in Beals, Maine.

Diving into student research at the Summer 2022 SEA Fellows Symposium

Beals, Maine — Twenty-five students from 15 universities nationwide presented their summer marine research at the sixth annual Science for Economic Impact and Application (SEA) Fellows Symposium, held this year at the Downeast Institute (DEI) in Beals, Maine. More than 50 people, including students and their family members; researchers; local municipal leaders and other community […]

Read more