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Bred in 1916 by Isabella Preston, Canada’s first female horticulturist, the Creelman lily sits among other lost and found ...
Recording the soundscapes of our ecosystems is a burgeoning field that allows researchers to better decode what the Earth is saying. But are we listening?
The history behind the Dundas name change and how Canadians are reckoning with place name changes across the country — from streets to provinces ...
Indigenous journalists are creating spaces to investigate the crimes committed at Indian residential schools, grappling with unresolved histories and a reckoning that still has a long way to go ...
2022 is the International Year of Caves and Karst. Here’s why you should care about the hidden worlds beneath our feet.
The daughter of a hereditary Mohawk chief and an English immigrant, Johnson used her hard-won celebrity to challenge Indigenous stereotypes Pauline Johnson was Canada’s first performance artist. In ...
It’s a sultry June evening in La Malbaie, a quaint town on the north shore of the St. Lawrence River in Quebec’s Charlevoix region. On Richelieu Street, I’m several stops into Overture des Terrasses, ...
How ‘maas ol, the spirit bear, connects us to the last glacial maximum of the Pacific Northwest ...
Another reckoning is coming with climate change. How do we deal with our mental health — and ultimately find hope?
Harold Innis, an important early 20th-century Canadian intellectual, famously claimed that Canada “emerged not in spite of geography but because of it.” This assertion rested on Innis’s remarkable ...
How the legacy of these woolly giants persists in pop culture, storytelling, ecology and even the controversial idea of de-extinction ...
The failure to recognize distinct species and subspecies of caribou is hampering efforts to conserve them. So, I revised their taxonomy.
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