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95 Results:
Sun through clouds over lake
10 m
Article
Social Science & Culture
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Searching for the sublime: Algonquin Park and the origins of wilderness tourism

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Adele Torrance
Ingenium
Jul 25, 2018
In the late 1800s, Canadian cities were in the process of a major transition due to great population increases, industrialization and a growing middle class. Toronto was no exception, and in terms of its population size and industrial production, was second only to Montreal in these years.
Athabasca Glacier, Alberta Canada
7 m
Article
Earth & Environment
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On Thin Ice - Athabasca Glacier Expedition

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LTE Program Assistant
Ingenium
Jul 10, 2018
LTE and Will Gadd descended into Alberta’s Athabasca Glacier to explore the effects of climate change on the glacier. The team was joined by Martin Sharp, a glaciologist from the University of Alberta who helped explain the impacts that climate change has had, and will have, on the area in general and the ice fields in particular.
A biplane in front of the museum
8 m
Article
Aviation
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Looking back: Canada’s Aviation and Space Museum celebrates the building’s 30-year history

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Lindsay Wolcott
Ingenium
Jun 15, 2018
This year, the Canada Aviation and Space Museum is celebrating the thirtieth anniversary of the grand opening of its new building. Originally known as the National Aviation Museum, it actually opened in 1960 at Uplands Airport in Ottawa before the new building was opened on June 17, 1988. Three decades after that historic day, it’s time to look back at where it all began. The following series of photos offers a snapshot of the museum’s history while two long-time employees, Gail Lacombe and
Heinerth photographs the under surface of the sea ice near Bylot Island. Photo credit: Jill Heinerth
10 m
Article
Arts & Design
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The veins of Mother Earth: Underwater cave exploration with Jill Heinerth

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Cassidy Swanston
Canada Science and Technology Museum
Jun 12, 2018
As a child, Jill Heinerth dreamed of being an astronaut. As a Canadian girl growing up in the twentieth century, this option didn’t seem accessible to her. Instead of a career that blasted her far above the Earth’s surface, she forged her own path deep within the Earth. She discovered a place where she could still explore hidden worlds, floating weightlessly. Although water is the lifeblood of our planet, we somehow know more about the cosmos than we do about our Earth’s own underwater caves
Main camera used by Karsh
10 m
Article
Arts & Design
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Lights! Camera! Personality! The Karsh of Ottawa Collection Profile

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Anna Adamek
Ingenium – Canada’s Museums of Science and Innovation
May 24, 2018
In 1997 Jerry Fielder contacted the then-director of the Collection and Research Division of the Canada Science and Technology Museum, Geoff Rider, with an offer of a donation. Each year the Museum receives several hundred offers from across Canada, yet Geoff immediately recognized that this was not an average proposal. Since 1979 Jerry had been a curator and an assistant to prominent Canadian photographer Yousuf Karsh.
An electric range
10 m
Article
Food
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From the Stove to the Electric Range: The Range Collection

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Louise Trottier
Ingenium
Apr 19, 2018
The Ingenium’s collection of ranges, includes a variety of appliances — fireboxes, table stoves, cooking plates, buffet stoves — and illustrates the main innovations made to these electric household cooking appliances between 1900 and 2000.
Seventy-six women from around the world were participants on the inaugural Homeward Bound Women In Science Leadership Expedition to Antarctica.
7 m
Article
Social Science & Culture
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Homeward Bound: Women in Science and Leadership in Antarctica

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Dr. Shelley Ball
Guest Writer, Biosphere Environmental Education
Apr 11, 2018
What better place to sharpen one’s leadership skills than amidst the harsh landscape of Antarctica. The frozen continent is filled with stories of leadership from the early 20th century explorers and their race to be the first to set foot on the South Pole. For 76 of us from around the world - all women with science backgrounds - Antarctica was the backdrop for our own explorations into leadership.
Exploring by the Seat of Your Pants logo
8 m
Article
Earth & Environment
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Google Hangouts with Women in Energy

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Let's Talk Energy
Mar 27, 2018
For Talk Energy Week 2018, In partnership with Exploring by the Seat of Your Pants, Let's Talk Energy hosted a series of energy themed Google Hangouts featuring women with various careers in the energy sector. Classrooms from throughout Canada and the U.S tuned in live and were able to interact and ask questions to the speakers, exploring energy topics from renewable energy to oil and gas, and everything in between. Click the link to see stories, videos, and pictures from the amazing week of
Using a magnifying glass to examine a plant.
10 m
Article
Agriculture
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Citizen science: Where research meets the public

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Cassidy Swanston
Canada Science and Technology Museum
Dec 21, 2017
Are you interested in learning about how the world works? You don’t need a lab or degree to explore – citizen science projects all over the world bring discovery to your home, backyard, or community. Citizen science is the product of researchers teaming up with the public to solve scientific issues. Projects exist in almost every field, including ecology, astronomy, molecular biology, and genomics. “Crowd-sourcing” research allows for data to be collected from all over the world, and benefits
An artist's impression of the interstellar asteroid 'Oumuamua.
10 m
Article
Space
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The Interstellar Asteroid

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Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Dec 7, 2017
There are almost one million asteroids and comets in our solar system. And every single one of them (we think) formed here, within our solar system, alongside the planets just over 4.5 billion years ago. However, in the summer months of 2017, an object not borne from the Solar System made a silent entrance, whipped around the Sun in September 2017, and started heading out again, never to return. This object, now named ‘Oumuamua, was the first asteroid discovered from outside the solar system
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