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12 Results:
A composite image of a clog hanging out of a wastewater pipe, a caribou with antlers, and a lightning storm over a city.
12 m
Article
Conservation
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3 things you should know about antlers, what you should be flushing down the toilet, and electron rain

A headshot of Michelle in a white blouse with black polka dots
Michelle Campbell Mekarski, PhD
Canada Science and Technology Museum
Dec 3, 2024
For the December edition, explore what antlers can tell us about Santa's reindeer, what you shouldn't be flushing down your toilets this holiday season, and how lightning on earth can cause electron rain in space.
Three images, side by side. From left to right: many spices and spice-filled spoons on a black surface, a crouching man with pen and notebook in hand, lunar craters of varying sizes.
12 m
Article
Agriculture
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3 things you should know about naming new animal species, the secrets hiding in lunar shadows, and possible new beneficial uses for spices

A headshot of Michelle in a white blouse with black polka dots
Michelle Campbell Mekarski, PhD
Canada Science and Technology Museum
Nov 1, 2024
Meet Michelle Campbell Mekarski, Cassandra Marion, and Renée-Claude Goulet. They are Ingenium’s science advisors, providing expert scientific advice on key subjects relating to the Canada Science and Technology Museum, the Canada Aviation and Space Museum, and the Canada Agriculture and Food Museum. In this colourful monthly blog series, Ingenium’s science advisors offer up three quirky nuggets related to their areas of expertise. For the November edition, they tell us about the art and science
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12 m
Article
Agriculture
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3 things you should know about the science behind the diversity of Canada's winter precipitation, the April 2024 solar eclipse and how to safely watch it, and how the new methods of bioponics can make hydroponic agriculture organic

A headshot of Michelle in a white blouse with black polka dots
Michelle Campbell Mekarski, PhD
Canada Science and Technology Museum
Feb 16, 2024
For the February edition, they tell us why there are so many different forms of winter precipitation in much of Canada, how solar eclipses come about and why safety comes first when observing them, and how a new form of agriculture called bioponics makes organic certification of hydroponics possible.
A woman examining a bottle of olive oil in a grocery store, Gravel terrain in beige with boulders identified in pink, craters in purple, and crater rims in turquoise, A close up of the tread of a winter tire showing deep, wide, jagged grooves and wavy sipes.
11 m
Article
Food
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3 things you should know about food fraud, how winter tires work and Canadian artificial intelligence headed for the Moon.

Profile picture for user Cassandra Marion
Cassandra Marion, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Nov 21, 2022
For the November edition, we explain how you may unknowingly be a victim of food fraud, how Canadian artificial intelligence will soon launch to the Moon, and how winter tires really work.
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
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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.
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
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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.
A spliced, three-part image depicts sugar beets and a pile of white sugar and sugar cubes, a view of a partially cloud-covered ocean taken from above the Earth, and a humanoid toy robot wearing a stethoscope.
12 m
Article
Agriculture
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3 things you should know about beets, satellites, and robotic surgery

Profile picture for user Renée-Claude Goulet
Renée-Claude Goulet
Canada Agriculture and Food Museum
Feb 16, 2022
For the February edition, we delve into a promising solution for combatting slippery winter roads, how satellites are improving our ability to monitor and study volcanoes, and why robotics may play an increasing role in medical surgeries.
A three-part, spliced image of a crate of cucumbers inside a greenhouse, an artist’s illustration of asteroids and spacecraft, and a digital blood glucose monitor and insulin needle.
12 m
Article
Agriculture
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3 things you should know about artificial intelligence, planetary defence, and insulin

A headshot of Michelle in a white blouse with black polka dots
Michelle Campbell Mekarski, PhD
Canada Science and Technology Museum
Nov 8, 2021
For the November edition, they dive into how artificial intelligence can automate greenhouse operations, NASA’s upcoming asteroid defence mission, and why exactly insulin is so critical to our bodies.
A composite image of several orange pumpkins, a spacecraft next to a rocky body, and a zombie
12 m
Article
Agriculture
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3 things you should know about pumpkins, Trojan asteroids, and embracing your inner zombie

A headshot of Michelle in a white blouse with black polka dots
Michelle Campbell Mekarski, PhD
Canada Science and Technology Museum
Oct 15, 2021
For the October edition, our science advisors discuss how selective breeding results in more choice at the pumpkin patch, a fly-by of seven Trojan asteroids, and why you need to embrace your “inner zombie.” Happy Halloween!
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
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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.
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