Adverse
Adverse: !TEST! !TEST! 2025-04-08 08:50:20
News for the Carolina community
Attendees solved the mystery of a missing pug in one of many events held in person for the first time since 2019.
Carolina Ph.D. candidate Mollie Yacano studies an invasive species that is surprisingly effective at preventing erosion and pollution on the North Carolina coast.
It’s hot out there! Look for the signs and symptoms of heat stress and follow advice for avoiding heat-related illness from Carolina’s environment, health and safety department.
More than 100 Massey Award nominators described how vital the practical knowledge and can-do spirit of this Outer Banks native is to the success of the Institute for Marine Sciences.
Carolina researchers are studying these highest of high tides to predict how rising sea levels and increasingly frequent flooding will alter North Carolina’s coast.
For 75 years, faculty, students and staff at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Institute of Marine Sciences have been conducting research that improves the life of North Carolinians.
One year after June 19 became a federal holiday, associate professor Renée Alexander Craft reflects on the historic day’s significance.
A new map-based online exhibit links to photos and recordings collected from Carolina’s LGBTQ community in a project spearheaded by the Carolina Pride Alum Network.