Skip to main content
Ingenium Logo

You are leaving IngeniumCanada.org

✖


This link leads to an external website that Ingenium does not control. Please read the third-party’s privacy policies before entering personal information or conducting a transaction on their site.

Have questions? Review our Privacy Statement

Vous quittez IngeniumCanada.org

✖


Ce lien mène à un site Web externe qu'Ingenium ne contrôle pas. Veuillez lire les politiques de confidentialité des tiers avant de partager des renseignements personnels ou d'effectuer une transaction sur leur site.

Questions? Consultez notre Énoncé de confidentialité

Ingenium The Channel

Langue

  • Français
Search Toggle

Menu des liens rapides

  • Ingenium Locations
  • Shop
  • Donate
  • Join
Menu

Main Navigation

  • Browse
    • Categories
    • Media Types
    • Boards
    • Featured Stories
  • About
    • About The Channel
    • Content Partners

Explore

Browse

Earth & Environment

Uncover stories related to geology, forestry, climate, and natural disasters.

Filters

Media

  • Article (150)
  • Blog (16)
  • Video (3)

Publication

  • BBC - Home (2)
  • BBC - Homepage (6)
  • CNRS-INSU (1)
  • European Space Agency (1)
  • Inside Science (1)
  • MARINE BIODIVERSITY HUB (1)
  • MIT Technology Review (2)
  • NASA (1)
  • NASA Earth Observatory (9)
  • National Geographic (1)
  • Natural Resources Canada (1)
  • popsci.com (3)
  • ScienceDaily (1)
  • Science News (1)
  • Space.com (1)
  • The Washington Post (1)
  • Western News (1)

Reading Duration

  • Long (11)
  • Medium (28)
  • Short (46)
172 Results:
Three images side by side, grocery shelves full of eggs in clear trays, coral reefs seen from space, and a map of Canada divided into four differently coloured shapes.
12 m
Article
Conservation
Share

3 things you should know about egg refrigeration, coral reef satellite maps, and watersheds

Profile picture for user Renée-Claude Goulet
Renée-Claude Goulet
Canada Agriculture and Food Museum
Jun 14, 2022
For the June edition, they explain why in Canada, eggs need to be refrigerated, how a satellite map of the world's coral reefs informs conservation, and how watersheds connect us to the oceans.
Autumn vista of a river winding between pine trees and snow-capped mountains.
5 m
Article
Communications
Share

AI-Generated sound therapy for critically ill patients

Profile picture for user Corona Guan Wang
Corona Guan Wang
Ingenium – Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Mar 30, 2022
At the start of 2022, I joined Ingenium – Canada’s Museums of Science and Innovation as a research assistant. Ingenium curators Dr. Tom Everrett (Communications) and Dr. David Pantalony (Physical Sciences and Medicine) invited me to write about a research project that I am currently affiliated with called Autonomous Adaptive Soundscape (AAS). The AAS is an intelligent bio-algorithmic system that selects therapeutic soundscapes to relax ICU patients, via application of machine learning and
A wide view of the underwater room in the RIPPLE EFFECT exhibition; the walls, floor, and ceiling are blue and information about water conservation adorns the walls.
2 m
Article
Earth & Environment
Share

A refreshing approach: Students create virtual exhibition to inspire water conservation

Profile picture for user David Lafleur
David Lafleur
Ingenium – Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Mar 30, 2022
When making a fresh start, we often aim to improve the lives of ourselves and others. Alongside resolutions to better our personal health and fitness, we can also make our planet healthier — by taking simple actions. RIPPLE EFFECT is a new, virtual museum exhibition designed to help Canadians conserve fresh water. While most Canadians are blessed with an abundance of clean fresh water, that is not the case for everyone. We are not immune to global warming, and one of its effects are increasingly
A spliced, three-part image depicts several unwashed potatoes on a white background, several springtails on ice pellets, and a black and white view of Saturn’s crater-rich moon Mimas, dominated by a very large impact crater on the right.
12 m
Article
Agriculture
Share

3 things you should know about PEI potato wart, Saturn’s moon Mimas, and animals with built in antifreeze.

Profile picture for user Renée-Claude Goulet
Renée-Claude Goulet
Canada Agriculture and Food Museum
Mar 22, 2022
For the March edition, we explain how a soil fungus forced PEI Potatoes into quarantine, that a hidden ocean may cause Saturn’s moon Mimas to wobble, and how some animals have built in antifreeze.
Tomanowos, better known as the Willamette meteorite, American Museum of Natural History, New York City, New York. Anon., “Ça et là, par l’image.” Le Samedi, 22 February 1947, 8.
Article
Earth & Environment
Share

Tomanowos, a visitor from the sky or Moon: A brief look at the largest North American meteorite known today

Profile picture for user rfortier
Rénald Fortier
Ingenium – Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Feb 6, 2022
Hello there, my reading friend. Given the name of the breathtaking and world-famous Canada Aviation and Space Museum, in Ottawa, Ontario, it occurred to yours truly that a space rock would make a nice anchor for an issue of our blog / bulletin / thingee. Let us therefore begin this pontification by quoting, in translation, the caption of the photograph found in a February 1947 issue of the illustrated weekly Le Samedi, published in Montréal, Québec.
A spliced, three-part image depicts a green-and-red plastic gadget attached to a cow’s tail, a composite image showing hundreds of meteors, and a close-up of a pair of glasses sitting on top of an open book.
13 m
Article
Agriculture
Share

3 things you should know about tech-enabled cows, meteors, and presbyopia

Profile picture for user Cassandra Marion
Cassandra Marion, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Jan 14, 2022
For the January edition, we explain new technology which is making cow births safer, an international citizen science initiative for monitoring meteors, and how a new eye drop is improving vision for the middle-aged consumer.
A three-part, spliced image of a parched and cracked area of soil, an atom encircled with electrons, and the surface of the Moon.
7 m
Article
Agriculture
Share

3 things you should know about salty soil, invisibility, and Canada’s lunar rover

A headshot of Michelle in a white blouse with black polka dots
Michelle Campbell Mekarski, PhD
Canada Science and Technology Museum
Dec 13, 2021
For the December edition, they explored the problem with high salinity levels in agricultural soils, a breakthrough in invisibility, and the emerging designs for the Canadian Lunar Rover Mission.
An illustration of a multi-ethnic group of children holding up a sun, a plant sprout, a raindrop and a recycling symbol. At the center, a child hugs planet Earth.
6 m
Article
Earth & Environment
Share

Science Literacy Week: 6 great ways to learn about climate

Profile picture for user Renée-Claude Goulet
Renée-Claude Goulet
Canada Agriculture and Food Museum
Sep 16, 2021
Looking for ways to take part in Science Literacy Week (Sept. 20—26, 2021)? We've got you covered with this list of engaging teaching and learning resources. You’ll find something for all ages…with a focus on the theme of climate.
A spliced, three-part image features: a tray of oysters on the left, a graphical representation of a black hole and a neutron star orbiting each other in the centre, and a graphical image of a robot on the right.
12 m
Article
Computing
Share

3 things you should know about acidification, gravitational waves, and humanoids

Profile picture for user Renée-Claude Goulet
Renée-Claude Goulet
Canada Agriculture and Food Museum
Sep 14, 2021
For the September edition, our experts wrote about why ocean acidification is posing problems for shellfish, how researchers used gravitational waves to observe a black hole and neutron star orbiting each other and merging, and what the future could look like — with humanoids in our midst.
A cartoon-style graphic of two hands holding a tablet; the screen features an open book and some science-themed icons like a light bulb, a microscope, and a rocket ship.
3 m
Article
Earth & Environment
Share

Science Literacy Week explores science in our everyday lives

Profile picture for user Sonia Mendes
Sonia Mendes
Ingenium - Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Sep 13, 2021
Hey educators! Help your students tap into their inner scientist…with fun and FREE resources during Science Literacy Week.
Page
  • Page 1
  • Current page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • …
  • Last page

Footer

About The Channel

The Channel

Contact Us

Ingenium
P.O. Box 9724, Station T
Ottawa ON K1G 5A3
Canada

613-991-3044
1-866-442-4416
contact@IngeniumCanada.org
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Channel

    • Channel Home
    • About the Channel
    • Content Partners
  • Visit

    • Online Resources for Science at Home
    • Canada Agriculture and Food Museum
    • Canada Aviation and Space Museum
    • Canada Science and Technology Museum
    • Ingenium Centre
  • Ingenium

    • Ingenium Home
    • About Ingenium
    • The Foundation
  • For Media

    • Newsroom
    • Awards

Connect with us

Subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest Ingenium news straight to your inbox!

Sign Up

Legal Bits

Ingenium Privacy Statement

© 2025 Ingenium

Symbol of the Government of Canada
  • Browse
    • Categories
    • Media Types
    • Boards
    • Featured Stories
  • About
    • About The Channel
    • Content Partners