Barely hidden from his study participants, William Jou, a former graduate student in mechanical engineering at Stanford University, pulled off a ruse straight out of The Wizard of Oz.
Simple, fast and flexible: It could become significantly easier to vaccinate plants against viruses in future.
Carbon reservoirs in the soil of boreal forests are being released by more frequent and larger wildfires, according to a new study involving a University of Guelph researcher.
As a least auklet lands on the bow of the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Healy, an audible gasp rolls through observers on the Healy’s bridge.
When spotting a butterfly, a common reaction may be to whip out a phone and snap a photo.
Early on a Sunday morning in June, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Prof. Matthew Johnson and two Carleton graduate students hauled 700 pounds (more than 300 kilograms) of gear into the Ottawa International Airport.
NOAA Ship Rainier field tested a new hydrographic survey platform this season.
Excitement was brimming this week as MacKimmie Tower’s first occupants moved into their new work spaces.
Wild African elephants, known for their intelligence, show markedly different movements and reactions to the same risks and resources.
By analysing 138 experiments, researchers have mapped the potential of today’s plants and trees to store extra carbon by the end of the century.
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