Col. Chris Hadfield answers your space odditiesRead some of the best answers from our live Facebook Q&A, where Canadian space hero Col. Chris Hadfield answered your questions
In the Klondike, a gold rush becomes an old rushFrom 2015: Discoveries of gold and ancient fossils go hand in hand in the Yukon. But the mammoth tusk trade has a dark side.
The science is in. And Insite works.Top researchers gather to learn how Vancouver’s safe injection site has made B.C. a medical world-beater—and a political pariah
The next big revolution in science? It’s in weather forecasting.Space travel and Internet innovation get all the science buzz. But new advances in weather tracking will truly affect us all
Remembering Clyde Tombaugh, discoverer of the (dwarf) planet PlutoHe lived in awe at the grandness of the universe, so it’s fitting perhaps that his ashes are now 0.0005 light years away
Are we on the cusp of a revolution in how we understand the brain?Two new studies suggest a potential game-changer in how scientists understand of the brain, which could advance research on MS and Alzheimer’s
Infographic: Charting the world’s sixth mass extinctionWe are entering the first mass extinction since the dinosaurs disappeared 65 million years ago
Science fiction, in the literal sense of the termBook review: A microbiologist-turned-author’s collection of short stories captures the cold precision of science
Gender inequality in the sciences? It’s still very present in Canada.In the last few decades, very little has changed for Canadian women in science, technology, engineering and math
Quiz: How much do you really know about dinosaurs?An entire generation learned about dinosaurs from ’Jurassic Park.’ Take our quiz to find out what the movie got right—and wrong