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, McGill’s Climate Change Artist-in-Residence, will curate the Faculty of Science’s Bicentennial Science/Art Exposition, billed as a “celebration of science in all its forms”.

The art show organizers are calling on all members of the McGill community to submit works in any medium, expressing what science means to them.

The deadline for submissions is October 31, 2021.

Published on: 30 Aug 2021

㽶Ƶ researchers have discovered a new way to track genetically modified animals using the artificial transgenes they leave behind in the environment. The discovery provides a powerful new tool to locate and manage genetically modified animals that have escaped or been released into the wild.

Classified as: genetically modified, animals, organisms, artificial transgenes, eDNA, environmental DNA, CSI, Charles Xu, Sustainability
Published on: 30 Aug 2021

The launched on June 30th, 2021, and McGill Outreach is participating!L'Archipel Virtuel is the firstdigital edition of the festival.

Classified as: STEM Outreach, Redpath Museum, EPS
Published on: 6 Jul 2021

Congratulations to our student Award winners at the Museum this spring!

The Museum is proud to announce two winners of the annual REDME (Redpath Museum Excellence Award) this year.

Published on: 10 Jun 2021

Learn more on our Climate Change Artist in Residence Milton Riaño in the article from the McGill Reporterright

Classified as: climate change, Public Outreach
Published on: 19 May 2021

Victoria Glynn, the public program representative from GARM (Graduate Association of the Redpath Museum), has won the prestigious .

Published on: 13 Apr 2021

Crocodiles are resilient animals from a lineage that has survived for over 200 million years. Skilled swimmers, crocodiles can travel long distances and live in freshwater ormarine environments. But they can’t roam far on land. American crocodiles (Crocodylus acutus) are found in the Caribbean and Pacific coasts of the Neotropics but they arrived in the Pacific before Panama existed, according to .

Classified as: crocodiles, panama, Caribbean, Pacific, evolution, ice age, Hans Larsson, José Avila-Cervantes
Published on: 16 Feb 2021

Artist’s interpretation of Labradormantis guilbaulti in liftoff among the leaves of a sycamore tree, Labrador, around 100 million years ago. The interpretation is based on fossils (for the wings) and living and extinct relatives (for the rest of the body). Fossilized sycamore leaves have been found in the same deposits as the mantis wings and show that this new insect species would have lived in a lush warm temperate forest during the Cretaceous. CREDIT: A. Demers-Potvin

Classified as: Research, paleontology, Redpath Museum, Praying Mantis
Published on: 19 Jan 2021

The Faculty of Science is celebrating McGill’s 200th anniversary with a student art exhibition on the theme of “Science!”. McGill students at all levels and all faculties are invited to submit works in any medium, expressing what science means to them.

Faculty of Science bicentennial committee member, Torsten Bernhard, says the aim of the exhibition is to celebrate science in all its forms.

Published on: 12 Jan 2021

It’s known that the primary cause of the mass extinction of dinosaurs, about 66 million years ago, was a meteorite impact. But the exact mechanisms that linked the meteorite impact to mass extinction remain unclear, though climactic changes are thought to have played a part.

Classified as: climate change, Sustainability, paleontology
Published on: 15 Dec 2020

Despite having bat-like wings, two small dinosaurs, Yi and Ambopteryx, struggled to fly, only managing to glide clumsily between the trees where they lived, according to a new study led by an international team of researchers, including 㽶Ƶ Professor . Unable to compete with other tree-dwelling dinosaurs and early birds, they went extinct after just a few million years.

Classified as: dinosaurs, bat-wingled, Ambopteryx, Yi, flight, birds, evolution, Hans Larsson, Sustainability
Published on: 22 Oct 2020

Our Virtual Tours are talked about in an article on The McGill Tribune!

Read all about it !

Created by Ingrid Birker of the Redpath Museum and Meghomita Das of the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, this tour will take you on an exploration of the fossils found in Montreal on and around the campus.

Published on: 14 Oct 2020

Many thanks to theDepartment of Canadian Heritage, under the Museums Assistance Program (MAP) for generous funding directly to the Redpath Museum!

We are grateful for this generous allocation of $14,083 to help us carry out our activities until the end of fiscal year 2021.

Many thanks to Anthony Howell and Annie Lussier, both collection managers and curatorial staff at the Redpath Museum, for pulling together and submitting the grant application.

Classified as: Public Outreach
Category:
Published on: 25 Sep 2020

Congratulations tothe team of graduate students who have received funding support from McGill Science Outreach and from an NSERC Student Ambassador Award for the development and implementation of a lesson plan to accompany the popular STEMM Diversity @ McGill colouring and activity book! This lesson plan will launch in the Fall semester, and showcase the diversity of science and the scientists who do it.

Classified as: STEMM outreach, Public Outreach
Category:
Published on: 3 Sep 2020

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