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climate change

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6 Results:
Three images side by side, Canada’s White Glacier, dried mealworms shown on a round wooden platter, and a pair of hands rubbing together, covered in soap bubbles.
10 m
Blog
Agriculture
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3 things you should know about insects as an important source of protein, the science superpowers of soap, and monitoring glaciers in Canada’s Arctic

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Renée-Claude Goulet
Canada Agriculture and Food Museum
Aug 22, 2022
For the August edition, we explain why insects are on their way to becoming an important source of protein in Canada, how and why soap actually works, and how the health and behaviour of Canada’s White Glacier is being monitored.
A barren, snowy landscape is set against a blue sky. A research facility for Environment and Climate Change Canada can be seen, with its lights glowing.
7 m
Article
Earth & Environment
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Why a warming Arctic matters and what we can do about it

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Cynthia Whaley, PhD
Research Scientist, Environment and Climate Change Canada
Sep 29, 2020
As an Arctic nation, Canada has a vested interest in what happens in the far North. Despite the fact that very little pollution is produced locally, the Arctic is warming three times faster than the global average.
A white humanoid robot stands with their arm resting on the Earth
6 m
Article
Computing
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Artificial intelligence and the fight against climate change

A headshot of Michelle in a white blouse with black polka dots
Michelle Campbell Mekarski, PhD
Canada Science and Technology Museum
Jan 20, 2020
Recently, the media has been flooded with warnings about climate change, and wildly contrasting predictions about the promise and pitfalls of AI. What you may not know is how AI and climate change are linked.
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.
A false colour image taken by NASA's Sentinel-1A focussed on the 130 kilometer-long crack in the Larsen C ice shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula.
6 m
Article
Earth & Environment
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Tracking a Crack in the Antarctic Ice Sheet

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Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Jun 30, 2017
Scientists have been closely following the growth of a large crack in the Larsen C ice shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula. From late 2016 until now, the crack has grown about 150 km long, accelerating in late June 2017. In these dark months, the most recent observations have been done by Thermal Infrared Sensor (TIRS) on Landsat 8. If the crack reaches the coast, which is just about 13 km away, the ice will begin to calve and could be the largest iceberg ever recorded.
a large open museum floor with multiple dinosaur skeletons
6 m
Article
Earth & Environment
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Volcanoes Signaled the End for Dinosaurs

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Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Jun 21, 2017
A study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) has concluded that a mass extinction event allowed for the rise of the dinosaurs. At the end of the Triassic period, approximately 200 million years ago, a period of 'pulsed volcanism' radically changed the climate of Earth, leading to the eradication of many species. The vacant ecological niches led to the rise of the dinosaurs. The study relied on measuring the concentration of mercury levels in rocks from

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