
Rebecca Tripp’s essay about her REU Canopy Explorers experience
The summer of 2013 proved to be an exciting time of discovery for eight undergraduate students, myself among them, who traveled from around the country

The summer of 2013 proved to be an exciting time of discovery for eight undergraduate students, myself among them, who traveled from around the country

Dr. Lowman’s latest Nature’s Secrets column in newsobserver.com: Every autumn, many millions of birds migrate from northern breeding grounds to equatorial locations. This annual flight

A scientist in his laboratory is not a mere technician; he is a child confronting natural phenomena that impress him as though they were fairy

Dr. Margaret D. Lowman, research professor in the College of Sciences at North Carolina State University and senior scientist at the North Carolina Museum of

Dr. Lowman’s latest Nature’s Secrets column in newsobserver.com: New PDAs (personal digital assistants or hand-held computers) are flooding the market with their myriad sound bytes,

[three_fourth]Another exciting NC Museum Citizen Science Expedition to the Amazon is planned for July 11-20, 2014. Join group leader Canopy Meg as you venture to

Dr. Lowman’s latest Nature’s Secrets column in newsobserver.com: The word “orange” comes from the French term “or,” meaning “gold.” As a legacy of childhood for

Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than the ones you did do. So throw off the

From Walter Magazine: Meg Lowman believes in a lot of things: The sanctity of the treetops. The importance of insects, curiosity, resilience, and adventure. She

Lydia Jo Ball writes: I recently graduated from Colby College, Maine, with my Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Science. I am passionate about research questions