Go behind the scenes as Rachel Lowenberg, student Collections Assistant, helps digitize the Brunel Collection, featuring more than 60,000 marine invertebrates from the Estuary and Gulf of St. Lawrence. Discover how art, science and data come together to bring these sea creatures to the world.| Canadian Museum of Nature
There’s a lot of life under the ice! Find out how Ruth Bryce is digitizing thousands of photos of Arctic and Antarctic marine life, taken by renowned explorer and museum scientist Kathy Conlan.| Canadian Museum of Nature
Find out more about our research team's discovery in the forest of the Canadian Museum of Nature: Xenodusa cava, a beetle species that lives in association with ants!| Canadian Museum of Nature
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
Located on Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, the Beaver Pond site features animal and plant fossils from almost four million years ago. First discovered in the 1960s, the site contains remains of a Boreal-type forest and wetland, suggesting a much warmer Arctic climate. Find out how museum scientists and volunteers are analyzing…| Canadian Museum of Nature