LSU Scientists Are Where?
You can find LSU College of Science Researchers all over the globe! Our scientists fearlessly go into the unknown—driven to find answers because science is everywhere.
Colorado
 Image by Alexis Gethin on Unsplash.
Image by Alexis Gethin on Unsplash.
Every summer, LSU Geology students and scientists visit the LSU Charles Barney Geology Field Camp near Colorado Springs. The field camp sits at the foothills of the Rocky Mountains
                  and is a space for students to go explore and learn outside the classroom!
               
               
               Bolivia

LSU ornithologist J.V. Remsen has studied birds in Bolivia for years! He has even co-authored the book, Birds of
                  Bolivia. And did you know that the LSU Museum of Natural Science has the world's largest collection of Bolivian birds?
               
               
               Antarctica

At least five LSU College of Science researchers work in the frozen landscape of Earth's
                  highest, driest, and most uninhabitable continent! These researchers are housed at
                  McMurdo Station, a United States Antarctic research station on the south tip of Ross Island. 
               
               
               Romania

Image by Nicole Baster on Unsplash.
LSU physicist Jeff Blackmon measures nuclear processes (like fission and fusion) that play an important role
                  in astrophysical environments. He visits the Horia Hulubei National Institute of Physics and Nuclear Engineering in Romania for his work.
               
               
               Philippines
 Image by John Hernandez on Unsplash.
Image by John Hernandez on Unsplash.
LSU biologist Jake Esselstyn studies the evolutionary history of small mammals. In the Philippines,  he examines
                  shrews, which are small mole-like animals.
               
               
               New Guinea
 Field accommodations in Kaironk Village in the highlands of Madang Province (6,000
                     foot elevation). Photo by Christopher Austin.
Field accommodations in Kaironk Village in the highlands of Madang Province (6,000
                     foot elevation). Photo by Christopher Austin.
LSU biologist Christopher Austin traveled all the way to New Guinea, where he discovered a lizard with green blood!
               
               
               
Are you up for a challenge?
Use programs, like Google Earth, to explore the world without having to leave your home! Search the places below in Google Earth to see exactly where our LSU College of Science researchers are around the world. Can you find them all?
- McMurdo Station, Antarctica
- LSU Charles Barney Geology Field Camp, Colorado
- Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, Chile