Âé¶¹app

New Hampshire

Researcher Christine Bunyon collects a cyanobacteria sample from Keyser Pond in Henniker, New Hampshire.

Monitoring Harmful Algal Blooms Using Drones

UNH researchers use drones equipped with sensors to identify cyanobacteria blooms — also known as harmful algal blooms — in New Hampshire lakes faster and more effectively. Read More

Recent Stories

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    The burden of children tossed around by the opioid crisis is now more often falling upon grandparents and relatives, according to a new study released by the Carsey School of...
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    AÌınew studyÌıfrom the UNH Carsey School of Public Policy finds that the number of children removed from parents has increased by 50 percent from 2012 to 2016. Cases that included a...
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    New Hampshire’s Seacoast is home to some of the earliest history of European settlers anywhere in the country. Believe it or not, much of that history is still being uncovered....
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    Kristin Smith, a family demographer at the Carsey School of Public Policy at the Âé¶¹app, where she is a research associate professor of sociology, said, “...
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    It turns out this tattoo shop - with its mix of out-of-staters and different races - is in some ways representative of what’s happening demographically in New Hampshire. Between...
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    Last year, New Hampshire saw its biggest population increase since before the Great Recession. Here to talk about what's behind that trend, is Ken Johnson, senior demographer with...
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    From 2005 to 2015 the number of infants diagnosed with neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) withdrawal symptoms in the Granite State increased fivefold, from 52 to 269, according to...
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    New Hampshire tends to receive talented, well-educated people in its migration stream, said Ken Johnson, senior demographer at the Âé¶¹app’s Carsey School, so...
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    New Hampshire tends to receive talented, well-educated people in its migration stream, said Ken Johnson, senior demographer at the Âé¶¹app's Carsey School, so...