KY NSF EPSCoR

KY NSF EPSCoR A National Science Foundation (NSF) Program created to build a strong science and technology researc

The National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR) has partnered with Kentucky’s state government, academic institutions and industries since 1986 to build a strong science and technology (S&T) research infrastructure within the state. The program has directly supported 1,900 Commonwealth researchers in the last ten years and creates about 50 ne

w S&T jobs each year. Our supported participants represent academic institutions across the entire state, including both of the Commonwealth’s research universities, as well as regional, private and community/technical colleges.

Bear witness to some great news! Our Lily Cornett Woods hazard station has passed inspection!✔️
06/01/2026

Bear witness to some great news! Our Lily Cornett Woods hazard station has passed inspection!✔️

04/28/2026

The CLIMBS Learning Hub is where science gets its boots muddy.

Led by Dr. Jen O'Keefe of Morehead State University, along with Amy S. Collick and UK's Jimmy Fox, CLIMBS faculty and students from across Kentucky gathered in Rowan County last summer for an interdisciplinary field day at the Sphagnum Swamp, extracting core samples and learning how to use them to reconstruct the climate record of this unique wetland habitat.

From sub-sampling and soil science, to palynology processing, microscopy, and climate reconstruction, participants experienced the full arc of paleoclimate research hands-on, in the field, and in collaboration with peers from institutions across the Commonwealth.

The CLIMBS Learning Hub connects students and faculty across disciplines and institutions to build research skills, and a shared network as we build storm resilience in Kentucky.

Video by Aviana Judd.

📌Apply to the Learning Hub today!The Learning Hub Scholars program is a PAID collaborative 10-month training program (Au...
03/13/2026

📌Apply to the Learning Hub today!

The Learning Hub Scholars program is a PAID collaborative 10-month training program (August to May) that trains undergraduate student researchers in the fields of geoscience, engineering and biology.

Learning Hub Scholars, in collaboration with their mentors, develop project objectives and scientific hypotheses, conduct research experiments and field data collection, and present findings at the annual Learning Hub Conference. Students across the state participate in monthly instructor-led virtual hangouts to develop “soft skills” needed for career success, followed by technical sessions to develop science and engineering skills.

ELIGIBILITY: Must be enrolled in a Kentucky college or university. Applications accepted for this year and future years of the program.

APPLY: Email a one-page resume and a 200-word maximum statement of interest to one of the Learning Hub instructors listening in this post. The deadline is April 1, 2026.

03/02/2026

Since the surface only tells part of the story, teamed up with Morehead State University and Screening Eagle Technologies for a couple hands-on days of resistivity and ground-penetrating radar (GPR) training and research.

We were at Big Bone Lick State Historic Site to work on KY NSF EPSCoR CLIMBS Project 2, Paleo-Perspectives, which aims to investigate the sediment layer for insights into Kentucky's flooding history.

It’s collaborations like this, academia, state survey, and industry, that pushes our understanding forward while giving students real-world experience with cutting-edge tools.

Big thanks to our partners for helping us see what we can’t see.

Full video: https://youtu.be/oBTcH9cvrIc

Article: https://kynsfepscor.uky.edu/digging-smarter-how-screening-eagle-and-climbs-are-building-kentuckys-paleoclimate-record/

🏠What do log cabins have to do with hazard resilience? Last week  dendrologist Dr. Meagan Rochner and her team of studen...
02/26/2026

🏠What do log cabins have to do with hazard resilience? 

Last week dendrologist Dr. Meagan Rochner and her team of students went to Owingsville, Kentucky to take core samples from the beams of a historic log cabin. Stay tuned for learning how the data retrieved from these samples not only dates the age of the cabin, but contributes to CLIMBS Project 2: Paleo-Perspectives.

02/19/2026
Northern Kentucky is CLIMBing 🌊🔬This summer at , five undergraduate researchers traded the classroom for the field—livin...
02/18/2026

Northern Kentucky is CLIMBing 🌊🔬

This summer at , five undergraduate researchers traded the classroom for the field—living and working at the and diving headfirst into real-world watershed science under the leadership of Chris Lorentz.

Here’s what they explored:
• Aarianna Bess – Tracking E. coli + coliform shifts in streams (dry vs. wet weather)
• Jessica Larka – Assessing stream health in Gunpowder Creek (Boone County)
• Isaiah Voet – Testing heavy metal filtration in native vs. invasive mussels
• Emerson Amy – Studying how predator visibility affects fathead minnow reproduction
• Bailee Stidham – Measuring road salt impacts on duckweed growth
 
This work is part of the CLIMBS Learning Hub, which is an eight-institution collaboration connecting faculty, grad mentors, and undergrads across Kentucky to strengthen research skills, build networks, and advance climate resilience for communities statewide.
As Professor Lorentz shared, the real impact wasn’t just in the data, but in the transformation. Students grew as scientists, collaborators, and leaders while contributing to solutions that matter.
 
🔗 Read more at the link in bio!
ClimateResilience

02/12/2026

How does extreme weather effect our transportation system in Kentucky? Siavash Taherinavid from CLIMBS' Project 6 explores that question in this research poster presentation from SuperCollider 2025.

Seed funding is where big ideas take root, and real impact begins. 🌱Now accepting proposals until March 13th!Seed fundin...
01/29/2026

Seed funding is where big ideas take root, and real impact begins. 🌱

Now accepting proposals until March 13th!

Seed funding gives researchers, educators, and community partners a runway to test bold ideas, form interdisciplinary teams, and turn promising concepts into scalable solutions. These early investments spark momentum that strengthens scientific capacity and delivers practical benefits to our Kentucky communities.

Ready to plant your next big idea? Submit a proposal and help turn your ideas into impact.

👉 https://lnkd.in/ejxK5MUZ

🌟Meet Dr. Manmeet Singh, the newest addition to WKU and the CLIMBS project as he brings AI-driven, street-level weather ...
12/19/2025

🌟Meet Dr. Manmeet Singh, the newest addition to WKU and the CLIMBS project as he brings AI-driven, street-level weather and climate modeling to Kentucky.

🌦️His high-resolution AI forecasting work, including models used during the 2024 Paris Olympics, highlights the potential for hyperlocal predictions in complex terrain. Within CLIMBS, this research is helping advance next-generation tools that could improve how severe weather and flooding are understood and managed.

This is foundational science with real-world stakes and a glimpse at what’s possible as AI reshapes weather forecasting.

Link in bio to read more!




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Lexington, KY
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