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CSBS Student Research Day

On April 17th, undergraduate and graduate students presented at the College of Social and Behavioral Science's Student Research Day. Congratulations to all of our students who shared their research! 

Below is a list of student presenters and research titles: 

  • Desi Crane: "Changing the Approach to Israel's Water Crisis: Water Security as Harmful Discourse" 
  • Ellie Ziemer: "Reconstructing Past Climates of the Great Basin Using Paleoclimate Proxy Data" 
  • Emel Aichele: "A Fire History from North Spring Along the Bear River, Idaho" 
  • Felix Elias Keil: "Wildfire Protective Actions: Evacuation and Shelter-in-Place in Park City, Utah"
  • Grace Piskadlo: "Deciphering the Paleoecology of the Great Basin Region" 
  • Jaydee L Dolinar: "Advancing Archaeological Understanding through the Environmental Archaeology Heuristic (EAH): Biogeographic Scaling of Prehistoric Human Adaptive Strategies in Late Holocene Southwest Wyoming" 
  • Max Wathen: "The Changing Commentary of Urban Trees" 
  • Oliver Cannata: "Exploring Distribution Patterns of an Introduced Species: Eastern Fox Squirrels in Salt Lake City" 
  • Rachel Christensen: "Exploring the Plasticity of Responses in Confiers Under Changing Atmospheric Conditions: An Analysis Using Pinus Longaeva" 
  • Ripley Dossett: "Urban Trees and Water Issues in News Quotations" 
  • Sylvan Carey: "A Study of Great Basin Paleoclimates Using Bristlecone Pine Fossil Records" 
  • Trinity Whitfield: "Building the Historical Context of the Bingham Canyon Mine, Arsenic, and Population Expansion" 
  • Zvonimir Simic: "How Historical Redlining Influences Discourse on Urban Trees" 
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Last Updated: 5/19/25