Cresten Mansfeldt News
- Associate Professor Sherri Cook and Assistant Professor Cresten Mansfeldt have been honored by The American Academy of Environmental Engineers and Scientists through its 40 Under 40 Recognition Program.
- The Marshall Fire spurred CU «Ƶ researchers to apply their expertise to the aftermath. CEAE Assistant Professor Cresten Mansfeldt, along with other researchers, collected water samples from Coal Creek waterway shortly after the fire; the work has since expanded to monitor the response of bugs and algae living in these waters. CEAE Teaching Professor Matthew Morris, who lost his Superior home in the fire, helped solicit design and construction proposals from builders, providing homeowners with a “short list” of options to select a builder.
- Nearly one month after the Marshall Fire became the most destructive and one of the most unique wildfires in Colorado history, CU «Ƶ researchers from across campus—many of them personally affected by the fire—have pivoted and applied their
- CU «Ƶ’s Alumni Awards are recognizing a team of faculty and staff for their efforts on the COVID 19 pandemic. Cresten Mansfeldt, an assistant professor in the Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering, is among a group of
- The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has announced $337,616 to the «Ƶ to create software tools to quantify and predict the effects of synthetic microorganisms on local, native and microbial communities. Last
- It’s a chilly spring morning in March 2021 and campus is quiet. Dew hangs on blades of grass. Songbirds chirp from the trees, while a few students speed by on their bikes and skateboards. But while campus may seem calm, an artificial river flows