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Dispatches from the Peanut Gallery

By Claire Eamer Do you remember the first science book you read? It probably wasn’t a heavy tome about a vital scientific issue of the day, or even a romp through the dusty corners and characters of...

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Can you truly write about science if you don’t comment back to commenters?

by Stephen Strauss I have been thinking about Darwin’s reflection on what might be termed the salesmanship of science as I try to understand something quite new arising in the world of science...

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The 2014 CSWA Conference: Authentic and Fun

by Altaira Northe From June 5 to 8, I had the good fortune of attending the annual Canadian Science Writers’ Association (CSWA) Conference in Toronto. It was my first CSWA event, and it will most...

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Rewilding and You

by Sarah Boon ‘Rewilding’ is a popular buzzword these days. Ecology books from 2013 that discuss rewilding including Canadian JB MacKinnon’s Once and Future World, American Emma Marris’ Rambunctious...

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Harvesting Sunlight

by Kimberly Moynahan Well here we are, finally in the dog days of summer. We’ve earned this after a long record-breaking winter and a much delayed spring here in southern Ontario. The dog days are...

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Data-driven Journalism 102

by Robert Aboukhalil It is often said that data science is 80 percent data preparation and 20 percent science. This was demonstrated in the previous installment of my Data-Driven Journalism series,...

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Shark Week: Pop Science to Pseudoscience

by Lillianne Cadieux-Shaw A giant shadow slices through the water, effortlessly, gracefully almost, as if in a ballet’s glissade. An eye glints in the darkness. A row of carnassial teeth appears and...

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Just Peachy: Finding nature’s genetic modification that turned peaches into...

by Meredith Hanel Peaches and nectarines are the same fruit minus a small genetic variation that makes nectarines hairless. When I first learned this little trivia tidbit I wondered about the...

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Confessions of a Former Climate Change Denialist

by Kasra Hassani I, a scientist with a PhD in Microbiology and Immunology, was a climate change denialist. Wait, let me add, I was an effective climate change denialist: I would throw on a cloak of...

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A Science Writer Puts Away the Non-fiction: NaNoWriMo

by Barry Shell After 30 years writing non-fiction for a living, on November 1, 2014, I started a novel. On November 30th, if I win the challenge, I’ll have a 50,000-word book. Short by some standards,...

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