You are what you eat — a journey toward graduate school in paleontology
I am very interested in what mammals eat and how that has changed through time with climate and vegetation changes.
- Featuring
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Dana Reuter ’15
Keep up with all the ways in which the Mount Holyoke community is pushing the limits of human knowledge, building lasting bonds and leading the way forward — on campus and around the world.
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I am very interested in what mammals eat and how that has changed through time with climate and vegetation changes.
Youth Writing Adventure happened in Amherst, MA with the help of a Professional and Graduate Education lecturer and some graduate students.
Linking student employment as a language resource mentor with future goals.
A biology and film studies double major, Anqa Khan ’17 is gaining an intersectional understanding of public health through her research and internships.
Terre Vandale ’02 uses Mount Holyoke’s Campus Living Lab as her classroom to teach her dance students about place, movement and the environment.
Nestled inside Mountain Day, like so many Russian Matryoshka stacking dolls, are the traditions within the tradition.
"Learning another language and culture led to insighta into the background of its artists I would never otherwise understand."
“The independent research I conducted on the black-house community in Chicago for my senior thesis through Lynk funding helped me see that I could manage a research project from beginning to end.”
An environmental studies student at Mount Holyoke and an alum working for the World Wide Fund for Nature make a life-changing connection.
“My semester in Hong Kong challenged me to think about the U.S. in new and different ways. I began to see its the role within a global context.”