En 2021, une rivière atmosphérique a provoqué de graves inondations dans le sud de la Colombie-Britannique, submergeant les routes. (Photo: La Presse Canadienne/Darryl Dyck) La pluie approchait et ...
Snow absorbs sound. Wind drifts through bare branches. Even the smallest movement seems to disappear into the stillness. In places like Northern Ontario, the landscape grows quieter than most people ...
At exactly 6 a.m., the sky above the Caribbean Sea shifts from violet to pale blue, almost as if someone has flipped a switch above the terrace of my hotel room on the island of Basse-Terre. Mourning ...
When scientists started documenting alarming declines in the Thechàl Dhâl herd of Dall sheep, it sparked a vital conversation between biologists and First Nations communities. What was causing the ...
Les populations de bœufs musqués dans l’Extrême-Arctique canadien luttent pour leur survie depuis les dernières années. Une chercheuse de l’Université de Calgary et ses étudiants sont en train de ...
Another reckoning is coming with climate change. How do we deal with our mental health — and ultimately find hope? I’m walking up a ridge of bedrock outside my house, talking to my brother 1,800 ...
Jane Marshall, Meghan J. Ward and Eva Anandi Brownstein (back to front) hike along Poligne Creek in Jasper National Park. I can hear the river now, a white noise dulling the morning bird song. It’s a ...
Research and exploration of the icy Arctic waters is possible because of the existence of the Canadian High Arctic Research Station, which opened in Cambridge Bay in ...
The South Saskatchewan River is under unprecedented pressure. Now, a major irrigation project is set to expand. The South Saskatchewan River is beautiful. That’s the first thing you need to know about ...
Dendrobaena octaedra is a the most common non-native earthworm species we are finding in Canada’s boreal forest. (Photo: Stephen Paterson) Earthworms have long been recognized as some of the most ...
A spirit bear walks the intertidal zone of Princess Royal Island, occasionally stopping to flip rocks in search of food underneath. I was about five when I first first encountered ‘maas ol (white bear ...