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Three images side by side, plastic-wrapped cucumbers, a woman with an inflamed shoulder, and the James Webb Space Telescope.
7 m
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3 things you should know about plastic-wrapped cucumbers, the James Webb telescope, and inflammation

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Michelle Campbell Mekarski, PhD
Canada Science and Technology Museum
Jul 14, 2022
For the July edition, they discuss how plastic wrap on cucumbers might soon be unnecessary, the first images from the James Webb Space Telescope, and how inflammation helps with healing.
A composite image made up of three pictures
10 m
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3 things you should know — February edition

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Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Feb 4, 2020
Meet Renée-Claude Goulet, Jesse Rogerson, and Michelle Campbell Mekarski. They are Ingenium’s science advisors, providing expert scientific advice on key subjects relating to our three museums — the Canada Agriculture and Food Museum, the Canada Aviation and Space Museum, and the Canada Science and Technology Museum. In this colourful monthly blog series, Ingenium’s science advisors offer up three quirky nuggets related to their areas of expertise. For the February edition, our science advisors
The Manitoba II , Physics Department, University of Manitoba
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Field Notes: Mass Spectrometry at the University of Manitoba

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David Pantalony, PhD
Ingenium: Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Oct 8, 2019
With the recent announcement that James Peebles had won the Nobel Prize in Physics, it is timely to revisit the history of the Physics Department at the University of Manitoba. In 2013, I visited the department to learn specifically about their program in mass spectrometry. On a broader level, my research and collecting touched on aspects of Peebles's rich undergraduate experience in the 1950s. It has been over one hundred years since British scientists developed methods to deflect ions (charged
A group of young citizen scientists test water quality.
5 m
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Water Rangers: Putting water quality testing into the hands of citizen scientists

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Cassidy Swanston
Canada Science and Technology Museum
May 30, 2018
Kat Kavanagh is the co-founder and executive director of Water Rangers, a citizen science project that brings education and water quality testing to the public. The Ingenium Channel sat down with her — over the phone, as she was away doing water testing at her cottage — to learn about Water Rangers and what it means to be a citizen scientist.

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