News

“Days on the water have produced in me the intensifying feeling of somehow growing together with the river: not thinking with it, but being thought by it.” – Robert Macfarlane, Is a River Alive?
Transportation is one of the biggest contributors to household carbon emissions and can be a source of stress, disconnection, and pollution in our communities. The good news? When we rethink how we ...
La Société canadienne de géographie a le plaisir d’honorer 17 photographes pour leurs images exceptionnelles de la faune et ...
A partnership between Miawpukek Horizon, Canadian Geographic, the Marine Institute at Memorial University of Newfoundland and ...
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?
Already gaining steam before the pandemic, interest in urban farming — and hunger for hyper-local food — has soared. A look at three Canadian takes on the urban farming phenomenon The early days of ...
*It means “awake” in Beothuk, the language and people who once called present-day Newfoundland home for about 2,000 years. One young woman, believed to be the last living Beothuk, left a collection of ...
The massive ichthyosaur fossil is now housed at the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Drumheller, Alta. (Photo courtesy Royal Tyrrell Museum) On a summer day in 1989, paleontologist Don Brinkman sat waiting for ...
2022 is the International Year of Caves and Karst. Here’s why you should care about the hidden worlds beneath our feet.
Today, there are 826 whooping cranes in the wild. This is, in part, thanks to the Calgary Zoo, which has been instrumental in saving these birds from extinction, along with four other endangered ...
Most international borders adhere to some sort of logic. They follow coastlines or rivers, watersheds or natural barriers. They make sense. Not so the 49th parallel. The border from the Lake of the ...
How ‘maas ol, the spirit bear, connects us to the last glacial maximum of the Pacific Northwest ...