
In addition, the facility houses paraffin incubators, slide warmers, wet bench workspace, ample storage space, a fume hood, and a dedicated workstation.

In addition, the Tescan VEGA3 is fitted with a Thermo Scientific UltraDry x-ray detector to carry out Energy-Dispersive X-ray Spectroscopy (EDX) for elemental analysis.


The core of the Mountains-to-Metro Specimen Collection includes plants, insects, fish, mammals, amphibians, reptiles, and birds collected across this region. The collection supports active research on local species as well as educational initiatives focused on living organisms and urban ecology.

The Oasis was built in the unused courtyard space between the Science building, the Science Laboratory building and the Clendenin building. This initiative, which includes a water basin containing and surrounded by a variety of plant species, was funded by a generous donor, Dr. Joseph Cook, and named "The Oasis" by the College of Science and Mathematics students in the CSM Courtyard naming contest. Construction for Phase I was completed in the Summer of 2014.
