Adverse

Adverse: !TEST! !TEST! 2025-04-08 08:50:20

Discover

Research and Innovation

Topple a paradigm. Uncover the Unknown. Tar Heels ask questions, develop answers, create solutions and discover cures.

  • Stephen Davis with large pot.

    Native narratives

    Research done by Chancellor’s Task Force on UNC-Chapel Hill History will help the University tell the story of the indigenous people who lived here.

  • Minor sets the stage for alumni success

    The communication department’s Writing for the Screen and Stage program emphasizes the dramatic writing skills needed for careers in both theater and film

  • Student drawing.

    ‘Finding strength through creative means’

    Superhero Project is pairing UNC Children’s Hospital patients with Carolina students and local artists to create superheroes modeled after the children.

  • Students work in a garden.

    CURE-ious Chemistry

    In collaboration with the Carolina Campus Community Garden, chemistry undergraduates are developing their own research questions and projects in a new class at Carolina, thanks to the drive and dedication of organic chemistry professor Nita Eskew

  • A black, female student in gloves and lab coat looks in a microscope.

    Seafood forensics

    Carolina students learn about the global health and social consequences of seafood mislabeling and the challenges that prevent accurate labeling.

  • Blueprint for Next logo.

    A vision to guide Carolina’s growth

    The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Chancellor Carol Folt announce the launch of the strategic framework that will shape the future of the University.

  • Three men look at art.

    Engaging brilliant minds in research

    Carolina professor Frank Baumgartner invited undergraduates to help him write his most recent book.

  • Boat in the ocean.

    Decades of discovery

    For 70 years, the UNC Institute of Marine Sciences, located in Morehead City, has provided a home for Carolina scientists — from undergraduate students to tenured professors — to study the complex marine and coastal systems of North Carolina and beyond.