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7 Results:
A spliced photo, from left to right: Shaun the Sheep in front of a model of ESA’s European Service Module, a top view into a red bucket containing thousands of light-brown, rod-shaped pellets, and a toddler wearing a wool hat and wool sweater holds a grownup’s finger.
12 m
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Agriculture
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3 things you should know about why wool keeps us warm, and about its surprising uses in the garden and in space.

Profile picture for user Renée-Claude Goulet
Renée-Claude Goulet
Canada Agriculture and…
Mar 13, 2023
For the March edition, we explain why wool keeps us warm, how it can be used to improve soil, and how it can help prevent fires in spacecraft!
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
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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…
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

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Michelle Campbell Mekarski, PhD
Canada Science and…
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.
Three images side by side, microscopic view of plant cells, space debris burning up in the night sky, garbage on a beach.
12 m
Article
Agriculture
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3 things you should know about living inoculants, space debris, and an ocean of plastic waste

Profile picture for user Renée-Claude Goulet
Renée-Claude Goulet
Canada Agriculture and…
May 5, 2021
For the May edition, we examine a new product that could give your garden a boost, the growing issue of space debris, and the urgent need to address plastic waste in our world ocean.
Waleed Sawan
Article
Engineering & Technology
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Waleed Sawan - Drip - A Precision Irrigation System for the Developing World

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Stuart Kite
Ingenium
Mar 27, 2018
Waleed Sawan - London, ON - Oakridge Secondary School Project: Drip - A Precision Irrigation System for the Developing World
A medical researcher performing tests
2 m
Engineering & Technology
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Science & Technology: Canadian Women Making an Impact

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Canada Science and Technology Museum
Sep 7, 2017
A bee harvesting pollen from a purple flower.
4 m
Article
Earth & Environment
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Science Says Neonicotinoid-Based Pesticides are Bad for Bees

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Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Jun 29, 2017
A large study performed by scientists from England, Hungary, and Germany has concluded that, while individual results may vary, the en masse use of of pesticides containing neonicotinoids leads to weaker Bee colonies.

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