Unwinding, a podcast


Unwinding with Joy Ward: Ecologist


Unwinding with Joy Ward: Ecologist

Joy Ward, ecologist

By now you've heard about climate change affecting weather cycles and sea levels, but a less discussed element of rising carbon dioxide levels is changes to vegetation. Associate Dean for Science Research Joy Ward and her team are seeking answers to questions about how plants respond under different climate conditions by simulating carbon dioxide levels in a lab setting. 

Learn more about Associate Dean Ward's research and how she first became interested in working with plants on our latest episode of Unwinding.

Unwinding with Jennifer Delgado: Astrophysicist


Unwinding with Jennifer Delgado: Astrophysicist

Unwinding Podcast's cover image for episode with Jennifer Delgado with a starry sky in the background

If you spent any time on social media this summer, you probably heard that United States government agencies confirmed the existence of video footage of UFOs taken by military aircraft. The videos reignited speculation about the presence of alien life visiting Earth.

Unwinding with Hannah Britton: Anti-trafficking Researcher


Unwinding with Hannah Britton: Anti-trafficking Researcher

Hannah Britton, anti-trafficking researcher

 

 

What does human trafficking look like? Most of us have seen stories of captivity play out on big or small screen with familiar casts of villains and victims. Compelling drama, perhaps, but the reality is far more complicated, and closer to home, than we might like to imagine. Make no mistake, says KU researcher Hannah Britton: it’s happening in the Heartland, and often in plain sight.

Unwinding with Katie Rhine & Macie Rouse: Community Researchers


Unwinding with Katie Rhine & Macie Rouse: Community Researchers

Katie Rhine & Macie Rouse: Community Researchers

Unwinding: A podcast

When most of us imagine a “lab,” familiar images and associations come to mind: sterile spaces equipped with white coats and Petri dishes, beakers, glass test tubes and granulated cylinders galore. Spaces where life-changing discoveries are made, no doubt — but Katie Rhine and her dedicated team of fellow scholars had something else in mind.

Unwinding with Ward Lyles: Compassionate Urban Planner


Unwinding with Ward Lyles: Compassionate Urban Planner

Ward Lyles with the text 'Compassionate urban painter'

What’s the foundation of a city? For urban planner Ward Lyles, the spaces we inhabit are defined as much by an approach to life, and the people we encounter, as they are by the systems and physical structures that make up a sound infrastructure. The way he sees it, the true bedrock of a strong community lies in a simple, yet immensely powerful, guiding principle: compassion

Unwinding with Alison Olcott: Dinosaur Hunter and Mars Explorer


Unwinding with Alison Olcott: Dinosaur Hunter and Mars Explorer

Illustration for Unwinding Podcast's Episode with Dr. Alison Olcott Do aliens exist on Mars? Possibly. But how do humans actually go about answering that question? One option is to examine rocks to understand the types of  life-forms, like squishy things, that roamed the earth billions of years ago. That's what Alison Olcott does in her role as associate professor of paleobiogeochemistry in the Department of Geology at the University of Kansas. And while playing on Google Maps one day, Alison found that the rocks she needed to study are found not far from KU, in the Gypsum Hills of Kansas. Who knew Kansas and Mars were so similar!

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