Opinion: Scientists certain human activity causes climate change
Alberta researchers unearth North America’s first feathered dinosaurs
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Aurora borealis could be seen in Lower Mainland Saturday
Stargazers should keep an eye out for a rare and electrifying treat this weekend. -
The Canadian disadvantage
The global economy is going through tectonic changes. Twenty years ago, industrialized nations represented two-thirds of global output, while developing nations were one-third.
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High turnover at DFO threatens environmental reviews: records
Heavy workloads and high turnover at the Department of Fisheries and Oceans could jeopardize the federal government's ability to protect Canadians from the dangerous impacts of industrial projects, say internal ... -
Alberta researchers help find earliest evidence of mobile life
University of Alberta scientists say they have uncovered the fossilized trails of an ancient slug that proves complex life evolved 30 million years earlier than established by previous discoveries. -
Marketing Feature: Innovation hubs give startups a critical edge
VeloCity and the larger community of Kitchener-Waterloo are good examples of ecosystems across North America that encourage and develop tech startups. -
Google merges digital and physical worlds with new image-based projects
Project Glass isn’t the only Google project designed to use the Web to give people a new window on the world, one overlaid with additional information provided by the Internet. -
Energy efficiency programs earn governments more tax revenue, federal study says
A new report says provinces that promote energy efficiency may forfeit some tax revenue from lower sales of fuel and electricity, but will make up for the loss - and ... -
Climate change threatens to disrupt the denning habits of polar bears
I am standing on the edge of a frozen lake 80 kilometres inland from the west coast of Hudson Bay. -
Scrap of European iron unearths 500-year-old Canadian mystery
A Canadian archeologist who excavated the remains of a 500-year-old First Nations settlement near Toronto has revealed a stunning discovery: a carefully buried, European-made metal object that somehow reached the ... -
Environment Canada confused by cuts, union letter says
Senior management at Environment Canada offered "blank looks" and expressed confusion after being told that cuts to a team of pollution-monitoring scientists would compromise the department's enforcement capabilities and the ...
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Exclusive Video: Oceannoise - Northern resident killer whales communicating
Threatened Northern resident killer whales in Caamano Sound on B.C.’s north coast communicating before being drowned out by noise from a cruise ship in Johnstone Strait. -
Genetically engineered pigs killed after funding ends
Canada's only herd of genetically engineered pigs has been killed, putting in jeopardy a plan to turn the technology into the first GE animal approved for human consumption. -
In era of revelation, privacy more important than ever
In an age in which people are sharing the tiniest details of their lives on Facebook and Twitter it’s hard to believe anyone still values privacy. -
Marketing feature: The history of storytelling
Learn about how storytelling has changed as technology has advanced throughout the years. -
Endangered caribou, birds and frogs among animals threatened by Enbridge pipeline: documents
Endangered populations of woodland caribou, along with rare types of birds and frogs, are among a list of at least 15 species that face threats from the potential construction of ... -
Paws for thought: black bears know how to count, scientists say
It looks like brown-coated Yogi Bear had it wrong: it's the black bear — one of Canada's most familiar and wide-ranging carnivores — that appears to be smarter than the ... -
Canada’s biggest risks to economy are internal, OECD warns
Canada’s economy will see moderate growth over the next two years, despite headwinds from Europe and elsewhere, but it faces internal risks from record household debt, lagging business innovation and ... -
Self-driving cars are almost here — but don’t expect to own one tomorrow
The technological fantasy of the self-driving car has been around for decades, but experts say the days of self-driving cars may actually — finally — be within sight. -
How the productivity of Canada’s health care stacks up to the U.S.
Canadians pay much less per capita on health care than do Americans, while ranking higher among the most common measures of human health. -
In depth: How the OECD says Canada can fix its ‘key long-term challenge’
Canada is an innovation and productivity laggard relative to its OECD counterparts. To the chagrin of anti-corporate activists, the OECD points out that while Canada has made some progress with ...
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