The Osher Center for Integrative Health at University of Vermont (UVM) is proud to announce that Dr. Helene M. Langevin, MD, ...
The University of Vermont has named Richard L. Page, M.D., Dean of the Robert Larner, M.D. College of Medicine, as its ...
For the second year in a row, University of Vermont has earned the number one slot on the Princeton Review’s “Best Schools for Making an Impact” ranking. The ranking is based on student responses to a ...
The 12th Annual Imbasciani Lecture, presented at the University of Vermont’s Robert Larner, M.D. College of Medicine on September 8, 2025, featured Blair Peters, M.D., speaking on “The Current State ...
With leaf peeping season here, University of Vermont forest scientist William Keeton explains the science behind why trees explode into colors each fall, and where in North America to find the most ...
Whales are not just big, they’re a big deal for healthy oceans. When they poop, whales move tons of nutrients from deep water to the surface. Now new research shows that whales also move tons of ...
With the lengthening daylight and the many seed catalogs arriving in your mailbox, it's hard to ignore the promise of spring. Are you planning to grow your own vegetable and flower transplants this ...
Vermont is becoming warmer and wetter due to climate change—and these trends are reshaping life in the Green Mountain State. That’s the big takeaway of the most comprehensive study of climate change ...
A book is made of wood. But it is not a tree. The dead cells have been repurposed to serve another need. Now a team of scientists has repurposed living cells—scraped from frog embryos—and assembled ...
Do you know that it is illegal to transport, buy or plant shrub honeysuckles in Vermont? This is because honeysuckles are labeled "Class B noxious" on Vermont's Noxious Weed Quarantine list. The ...
As we enter the final week of what has been a challenging academic year, I am reaching out to you with three messages. First, I want our students to know that I see and hear you. I see you mourn for ...
Easily recognized by their sweet fragrance and cone-shaped clusters of tiny flowers, the common lilac (Syringa vulgaris) has been a part of America’s gardens for much of our country’s history. Lilacs ...