MENU CATEGORIES

Connect with us

Submit a Tip
MENU CATEGORIES
Posts with Category "Science"

Welcome back to Science Fair, Bwog’s weekly roundup of science events happening around campus. As always, email science@bwog.com if you want your event featured.

Read More

This semester, we’re bringing back Science 101, Bwog’s semi-regular advice column geared towards science students! In this edition, Science Editor and Environmental Biology major Sydney Wells explains all the different biological science majors at Barnumbia.

Read More

Last Friday, with the Columbia Center for Archaeology, Dr. Lamya Khalidi presented her research on human adaptation to the changing climate in the Afar Lowlands of Ethiopia during the early to late Holocene.

Read More

Welcome back to Science Fair, Bwog’s weekly roundup of science events happening around campus. As always, email science@bwog.com if you want your event featured.

Read More

On Thursday, January 26, Columbia Climate School hosted Dr. Nyeema Harris as part of the Emerging Voices in the Geosciences and Society Seminar Series. Professor Harris gave a talk about how human presence has impacted animals, specifically carnivores, across complex landscapes.

Read More

Welcome back to Science Fair, Bwog’s weekly roundup of science events happening around campus. As always, email science@bwog.com if you want your event featured.

Read More

Welcome back to Science Fair! As everyone returns to campus, science events are back in full swing and Bwog is here to spread the word (now through a new science editor!). As always, email science@bwog.com if you want your event featured.

Read More

A spotlight from the Biomedical Engineering Department featured thoughts on how to improve disease diagnostics and the University’s approach towards science.

Read More

On Thursday, December 15th, alumnus Miguel Martinez spoke on the mergers of triple systems within clustered and isolated environments in space.

Read More

On Wednesday December 7, Tiffany Nichols lectured about her research on the process to locate and acquire a site for the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) as a part of the New York History of Science Lecture Series.

Read More

Welcome back to Science Fair, Bwog’s weekly roundup of science events happening around campus. Notably, this week is the last one with the current Science Editor. He loves this round up, but stay tuned for the next amazing Science Editor! As always, email science@bwog.com if you want your event featured.

Read More

At the Astronomy and Astrophysics Department colloquium’s Radical Hypothesis Lecture, Daniel Apai spoke about the Nautilus project, an idea that seeks to redefine and improve space observation.

Read More

Welcome back to Science Fair, Bwog’s weekly roundup of science events happening around campus. As always, email science@bwog.com if you want your event featured.

Read More

On Tuesday, MIT physics professor Nikta Fakhri gave a guest lecture on nonequilibrium processes in living matter and how they assist in making life possible.

Read More

Same Semester, New President!

What Should Acting President Claire Shipman's Nickname Be?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

Recent Comments

The chimp found the banana glowing on a mossy stump just after sunrise, humming a tune suspiciously similar to a (read more)
Science Fair: Viking Edition
January 22, 2026
On APril Fool's the Jester Band serenaded our Orgo class but Breslow kept teaching as if nothing happened. When they (read more)
Call For Opening Remarks: Spring 2026
January 22, 2026
i missed so much this year wtf (read more)
Bwog Presents: The Official Top 100 Pop Culture Moments Of 2025
January 7, 2026
ghosts of bwoggers past are so proud y'all are continuing the top 100 pcm tradition so beautifully <3 (read more)
Bwog Presents: The Official Top 100 Pop Culture Moments Of 2025
January 2, 2026

Comment Policy

The purpose of Bwog’s comment section is to facilitate honest and open discussion between members of the Columbia community. We encourage commenters to take advantage of—without abusing—the opportunity to engage in anonymous critical dialogue with other community members. A comment may be moderated if it contains:
  • A slur—defined as a pejorative derogatory phrase—based on ethnicity, race, gender, sexual orientation, ability, or spiritual belief
  • Hate speech
  • Unauthorized use of a person’s identity
  • Personal information about an individual
  • Baseless personal attacks on specific individuals
  • Spam or self-promotion
  • Copyright infringement
  • Libel
  • COVID-19 misinformation