Tania Schoennagel
- "Encompassing South American wildfires, Arctic sea-ice retreat, post-Soviet politics, climate change in Tibet and GIS, CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ geographers keep their fingers on the pulse of a changing world"A new article titled "This is not your junior-high
- Western U.S. forests killed by the mountain pine beetle epidemic are no more at risk to burn than healthy Western forests, according to new findings by the ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ that fly in the face of both public perception and policy.The
- A new study that included researchers at the University of Colorado asserts that despite the series of damaging forest fires across the state in the past decade, they don't represent a dramatic departure from the historical norm.The area of the
- Tania Schoennagel quoted in NASA Earth Observatory, Building in Colorado's Fire Zone Part 1 Natural Hazards, 11.7.13 and Part 2 Natural Hazards, 11.8.13.
- Results of a new study show that episodes of reduced precipitation in the Southern Rocky Mountains, especially during the 2001-2002 drought, greatly accelerated a rise in numbers of mountain pine beetles. The overabundance is a threat to regional
- Whizzing along the I-70 corridor into the Rocky Mountains, it's hard not to notice widespread patches of dry, dead, red trees dispersed throughout the steep green hillsides. Whether they are ponderosa pines or lodgepole pines, many of these trees
- Tania Schoennagel quoted in National Geographic article, In Rocky Mountain Forests, More Fires and More People