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We have all heard the terms "global warming" and "climate change" before, and perhaps even used them interchangeably. Maybe you've noticed an increase in the use of the term "climate change" over "global warming" recently, which can even be seen by their swap in which one has been showing up more often in Google searches...
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China has had a tumultuous history of struggling to solidify its position as a world power in the eyes of the West. However, over the course of history they have gone from being exploited by western powers to dominating the global economy and having one of the loudest voices on international issues.
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Under the Global Challenges & Social Justice curriculum, this course counts for the Global Challenges area of inquiry through the Data & Quantitative Reasoning (DQR) perspective. This course will cover various global challenges in which differential equations are used to study. Some of these included Populations Modeling and Species Conservation, Pollution/global warming (Mixing Problems), Safety in engineering designs (Tacoma Narrows Bridge) and Turbulence.
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This site to displays in time and space what the course taught in term of Americans’ interactions with their environment over the past few centuries. Students contribute materials weekly over the course of the term, and contribute a set of items derived from their “hometown environmental history” research as part of the final project.
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This course has students analyze contemporary texts from the Afrofuturist canon, travel the sonic byways, and explore other Black cultural production by creators who are grounded in the past and have a more inclusive view of the future.
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This exhibition seeks to highlight the stories and experiences of LGBTQ+ people at Union College, using the archival material available at Special Collections and Archives. Featuring materials identified in the 2023 Ruth Anne Evans Research Fellowship, the goal is to uncover and bring to light queer history at Union that has either been buried or that has yet to be recognized as queer.
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The Osmond D. Putnam photographs (ARL-081) provide a glimpse into the close of the 19th century as the Adirondacks moved from an isolated wilderness to a permanently settled part of the state.
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A diary belonging to Jane Bigelow between July 1864 to July 1865. Jane writes about living in Europe when her husband John Bigelow was appointed the U.S. Consul to Paris during the American Civil War.
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A picture of Union College alumni John Bigelow from 1911.