Think you know Triceratops? Recent research shows that this iconic dinosaur didn’t just evolve—it transformed in a rare, straight-line fashion called anagenesis. And one of the Canadian Museum of Nature’s lead dinosaur researchers, Jordan Mallon, plays an important role in that story.| Canadian Museum of Nature
A hidden treasure revealed—nearly 9,000 nature and conservation books, many over a century old, are being inventoried at the museum’s Rare Book Collection. Discover how student Lauren Lok Man Wong helped catalogue these fragile materials, making them accessible to researchers worldwide.| Canadian Museum of Nature
The Canadian Museum of Nature is one of 80 institutions worldwide digitizing their biodiversity literature and making it freely available as part of the Biodiversity Heritage Library. Already, the museum has contributed more than 600 books and 65,000 pages to this global biodiversity community. Find out how we do this…| Canadian Museum of Nature