2015年6月22日 星期一

2015-06-23 Canada English Science


The Globe and Mail
   
Footprints uncovered off BC coast could be oldest in North America   
The Globe and Mail
More than 13,000 years ago, two adults and a child walked around a fire pit on Calvert Island, off the coast of British Columbia. The footprints they left in soft clay near the shore were soon covered with black sand, which hid them until a team of archeologists ...

Human footprints found along BC shoreline may be oldest on continent   Vancouver Sun
Footprints found on B.C.'s Calvert Island may be oldest on continent   Globalnews.ca
Human Footprints Found In BC May Be Oldest In North America   Huffington Post Canada
CHEK   
Macleans.ca   
all 28 news articles »   


CTV News
   
Stanley Park tourists treated to rare orca pod sighting   
CTV News
A pod of killer whales paid a visit to Vancouver's shoreline Monday, giving a rare treat to tourists walking the Stanley Park Seawall. The transient orcas were spotted in Burrard Inlet around noon, and crowds of people flocked to take in the breathtaking sight.
A pod of killer whales visited Vancouver's Burrard Inlet on Monday. These rare ...   Vancouver Sun
Killer whale pod spotted in Vancouver's Burrard Inlet   CBC.ca
Photos: Orcas swim in Vancouver as aquarium launches whale-spotting app   MetroNews Canada
Huffington Post Canada   
Globalnews.ca   
all 13 news articles »   


CTV News
   
Look up skywatchers: Auroras show expected Monday night   
CTV News
Skywatchers might be treated to a dazzling display of auroras in parts of Canada overnight Monday, as three huge bubbles of gas ejected from the sun are expected to meet up in space. The U.S.-based National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's ...

Miss the northern lights this weekend? Great chance to catch them tonight   Globalnews.ca
If clouds co-operate an Auroras show is ahead for Canada   The Weather Network
Geomagnetic storms possible today   Tucson News Now
EarthSky   
Cumbria Crack   
all 7 news articles »   


National Post
   
A boon or a bust? Quantum computing is as paradoxical as the theories that ...   
National Post
Quantum computers are almost as paradoxical as quantum theory itself. They both exist and they don't. They promise massive innovation and yet their capabilities aren't fully known. They could be up and running around the world within years, or within ...

Computing takes quantum leap as Burnaby's D-Wave breaks 1000-qubit barrier   Business in Vancouver
D-Wave Breaks 1000 Qubit Quantum Computing Barrier   insideHPC
D-Wave Systems Breaks the 1000 Qubit Quantum Computing Barrier   Digital Journal

all 6 news articles »   


CBC.ca
   
Bedford Basin water tested by Dalhousie researchers   
CBC.ca
The Bedford Basin was a outdoor science lab for a group of Dalhousie University researchers who spent the day testing sea water for Ocean Sampling Day. Ocean Sampling Day is an international initiative that coordinates scientists around the world to get a ...

Dalhousie University Researchers partake in Ocean Sampling Day   CTV News
Halifax researchers study waters of Bedford Basin   Globalnews.ca

all 3 news articles »   


CBC.ca
   
Watch Perimeter Institute's webcast on influential physicist Emmy Noether   
CBC.ca
Livestream More on livestream.com. Convergence – Emmy Noether: Her life, work and inf. Event starts Mon Jun, 22 2015 5:00 PM PDT Get Notified. Convergence – Emmy Noether: Her life, work and inf. The Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in ...

Perimeter Institute delves into the life of Emmy Noether. Watch live from Waterloo   National Post
100 Years of Great Physics: Watch Live Monday and Tuesday [Video]   Scientific American
Emmy Noether, hero of symmetry and conservation: Public lecture with Peter ...   The Guardian

all 5 news articles »   


Ottawa Citizen
   
U.S. Coast Guard launches major study of Arctic Ocean – Canadian scientists ...   
Ottawa Citizen
HMCS Toronto and the Canadian Coast Guard Ship (CCGS) Pierre Radisson sail past an iceberg in the Hudson Strait off the coast of Baffin Island. Photo by: Sergeant Kevin MacAulay. Share Adjust Comment Print. U.S. Coast Guard Capt. Jason Hamilton, of ...

Seattle Icebreaker Heads For North Pole   KUOW News and Information
Coast Guard cutter Healy heads out on Arctic expedition   Washington Times

all 29 news articles »   


Beaufort Sea acidifying fastest in the world, new study says   
The Chronicle Journal
Research suggests Canada's Beaufort Sea is becoming acidic more quickly than any other ocean in the world, offering a window into what a major side effect of climate change will do to waters around the globe. "As goes the Arctic, so go the rest of the ...


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National Post
   
The Great White Continent: Growing threat of global warming means Antarctic ...   
National Post
The land at the bottom of the world is immense. Antarctica is the fifth largest continent, bigger than Europe and Australia, and is the driest, coldest and windiest. The Great White Continent is made up of 90 per cent of the world's ice and 70 per cent of the ...

Antarctica: A Travelers Guide   Discovery News

all 7 news articles »   


Vancouver Sun
   
Toxic algae bloom west of Vancouver Island threatens salmon   
Vancouver Sun
VICTORIA - A toxic algae bloom west of Vancouver Island has prompted shellfish harvest bans and may affect salmon stocks, federal scientists say. The bloom stretches along the Pacific coast from California to B.C., making it possibly the largest one on ...

Scientists: Toxic algae bloom off West Coast most prolific ever   Empire State Tribune

all 4 news articles »   

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