• Home
  • Partner With Us
  • Faculty & Staff Directory
  • Careers
  • For Journalists
  • Contact
DRI
  • Who We Are
    • About DRI
    • Strategic Plan 2020-2025
    • Leadership Team
    • Faculty & Staff Directory
    • 60-Year History
    • Awards and Scholarships
    • DRI Publications
    • Support DRI
    • DRI Foundation
    • Policies and Compliance
  • What We Do
    • Divisions
      • Atmospheric Sciences
      • Hydrologic Sciences
      • Earth and Ecosystem Sciences
      • Education and Workforce Development
    • Areas of Research
    • Laboratories and Facilities
    • Programs and Networks
    • Projects and Collaborations
    • PreK-College Education Outreach
    • Research Libraries
    • Graduate Programs
    • Citizen & Community Science
      • Mountain Rain or Snow
      • Project Ashfall
    • Research Park
  • News & Events
    • News & Announcements
    • Behind the Science Blog
    • Storymaps
    • DRI Special Events
    • AWE+
    • Newsletter Sign Up
  • Our Impact
  • Search
  • Support DRI
Select Page

Landscape of Newfoundland with red rocks in a valley between Mountains similar to the surface of Mars.

Mars Likely Had Cold and Icy Past, New Study Finds

By Elyse DeFranco | Jul 10, 2024 | Research findings, Elyse DeFranco

A new study finds evidence to support that Mars had a cold and icy past by identifying similarities between soils found on Mars and those of Canada’s Newfoundland, a cold subarctic climate. The study, published July 7th in Communications Earth and Environment, looked for soils on Earth with comparable materials to Mars’ Gale Crater.

Read More

lichen sample

NASA grant funds research for sunscreen on Mars

By DRI Communications | Jan 3, 2022 | News releases, DRI Communications

Researchers at the University of Nevada, Reno in collaboration with Henry Sun of the Desert Research Institute and Christopher McKay of the NASA Ames Research Center received a NASA Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR) seed grant to study how they can mimic biology to make some powerful sunscreen.

Read More

Working to solve our most challenging environmental problems.

More than 600 highly-skilled scientists, engineers, technicians, students, and staff work collaboratively within and across four research divisions focused on understanding and answering critical science questions about changes in the environment, water quality and availability, air quality, the sustainability of desert lands, life in extreme environments, education, and more.

© Desert Research Institute

 

Who We Are

Faculty Directory

About DRI

Our Leadership

Our History

Careers

What We Do

Areas of Research

Special Programs

Labs & Facilities

News & Events

Contact Us

Follow DRI

Newsletter Sign-up

  • Accessibility
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Public & Personal Safety
  • Equal Employment Opportunity
  • NSHE
  • DRI Bylaws
  • Conflict of Interest Policy