Friday 08 May • 8:30 am-Noon
Marine Science Bldg 100
UH Manoa Campus
Please join us as the second cohort of C-MORE Scholars present on their undergraduate research experience for the Spring 2009 semester. Refreshments will be served. For information about individual projects, please visit the Scholars projects page.
On Wednesday 15 April 2009, ground was broken at UH Mānoa for a $22 million building to house C-MORE labs and offices. It will be one of 17 National Science Foundation centers of science and technology nationwide, and the only one in Hawai‘i. US Sen. Daniel Inouye noted that when he started his college career, ambitious students wanted to go elsewhere to get a top educational experience. “When I got into this business, I said to myself, ‘We’re going to change that‘,” he said, “And this is a demonstration of that change. Now … this is the place to look into oceanography. This is the place where the experts reside.”
Read more about in the Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Photo courtesy of Sam Wilson; click on it to see the full image.
Previous announcements are available on the Archived News and Announcements page.
Thank you to the participants and attendees of the groundbreaking ceremony, with special thanks to University of Hawai‘i President David McClain, UH Mānoa Chancellor Virginia Hinshaw, US Senator Daniel Inouye (above), C-MORE Director Dave Karl, NSF-OIA head Lance Haworth, and Kahu Kordell Kekoa!
To view a video of the ceremony, click on the image above or click here (requires RealPlayer; the video make take a few moments to download, depending on your connection). This video was directed and produced by Eric Grabowski.
The Center for Microbial Oceanography: Research and Education (C-MORE) was established in August 2006 as a National Science Foundation (NSF) sponsored Science and Technology Center. The center is designed to facilitate a more comprehensive understanding of the biological and ecological diversity of marine micro-organisms.
Life has its origins in the sea: the first living things were microbes. Marine microbes are the most abundant life forms on Earth, and everything about them is extraordinarily diverse: their structures, their genomes, their physiologies, and their ecological interactions with each other and with the rest of life on the planet.
As a global research information center working across disciplines, C-MORE brings together teams of experts—scientists, educators, and community members—who usually have little opportunity to interact, facilitating the creation and dissemination of a new understanding of the critically important role of marine microbes in global habitability.
The center’s mission and unifying vision is expressed it the motto: Linking Genomes to Biomes.
The Center’s activities are shared among five partner institutions:
and is coordinated at the University of Hawai‘i at Manoa.