- UA Helps Build Heritage Conservation Program in Afghanistan In an effort to help Afghanistan preserve its past, the UA is partnering with Kabul University to help build the college's cultural heritage conservation program.
- Student EMTs Give Rapid Response to Campus Emergencies Whether it's a bicycle collision or difficulty breathing, the UA community can count on quick help from students trained and certified as EMTs.
- High School Students Devise More Accurate Climate Modeling Method High school students have co-authored a scientific paper with their UA grad student instructor that could have a serious impact on the reliability of climate models.
- Bringing Neurology Care to Arizona’s Four Corners Region Dr. David Labiner has offered quarterly neurology clinics at Indian Health Service and health-care facilities on the Navajo and Hopi reservations for about 15 years.
- UA Research Demonstrates How Bilinguals Switch Between Languages Individuals who learn two languages at an early age seem to switch back and forth between separate "sound systems" for each language, according to UA research.
- Archaeologists Unearth New Information on Origins of Maya Civilization A new UA study in the journal Science challenges the two prevailing theories on how the ancient Maya civilization began. The findings are based on seven years of excavations.
- UA Researchers Solve Mystery of Lincoln's Funeral Train UA researchers have turned their attention to one of the last remaining mysteries about Abraham Lincoln's funeral - the color of the president's railcar.
- Good Days, Bad Days: When Should You Make Sacrifices in a Relationship? A new UA study suggests that while making sacrifices in a relationship is generally positive, doing so on days when you are feeling especially stressed may not be beneficial.
- World’s Longest-Running Plant Monitoring Program Now Digitized Researchers at the UA's Tumamoc Hill have digitized 106 years of growth data on individual plants, making the information available for study by people all over the world.
- UA-Led Asteroid Mission is a Go NASA has granted final approval of the OSIRIS-REx sample return mission led by the UA. Such samples are critical to understanding the origin of the solar system, Earth and life.






