Canada Science News
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Japan takes aim at Ontario's green energy plan
Ontario's push for green energy has sparked a dispute with Japan, which is poised to launch a formal complaint over government subsidies for firms that are building solar and wind power projects in the province.
Life on Mars? Scientist finds new clues to say...maybe
The detectives trying to unlock the mystery of whether life ever existed on Mars have uncovered a new clue that they believe will help solve the cold case. For more than three decades, it's been widely accepted that the red planet is lifeless.
2 asteroids fly near Earth
One transport truck-sized asteroid passed the Earth Wednesday morning and another will soar by in the afternoon, with both far closer to the planet than the moon.
Japanese stem cell researcher wins Balzan prize
The Balzan Foundation says its prize for the biology of stem cells has gone to a Japanese researcher for discovering a way to transform adult cells into cells with the characteristics of stem cells.
Scientists race to find dark matter in Canadian mine
Wherever there�s a deep hole somewhere in the world, there is a physicist down it trying to shed light on the shadowy secrets of the universe, says Nigel Smith, the director of the deepest hole physicists have yet burrowed into.
Fall peaches bred in Niagara
A professor at the University of Guelph in southern Ontario is developing a series of peach varieties that could continue to be available into late September.
Do pride and sex motivate us to donate to charity?
What motivates us to give our money away? Most of us would say we donate to charity for that "warm glow" of knowing we helped our fellow man. But research suggests we're more influenced by guilt, self-interest and sometimes, to look better to the opposite
Jordan discovers 3,000-year-old Iron Age temple
Archaeologists in Jordan have unearthed a 3,000-year-old Iron Age temple with a trove of figurines of ancient deities and circular clay vessels used for religious rituals, officials said Wednesday.
Supercomputer clue to black holes
The colossal black holes at the centres of galaxies probably formed shortly after the Big Bang, a study suggests. Some of these behemoths are billions of times more massive than our Sun.
Urine could be energy source of the futureIt's a renewable resource, and approximately 10 billion litres are flushed away every single day around the world. But scientists say everyday urine should be conserved and used to heat buildings or even run cars.
Microbe thriving by eating spilled oil in Gulf
WASHINGTON — A newly discovered type of oil-eating microbe suddenly is flourishing in the Gulf of Mexico. Scientists discovered the new microbe while studying the underwater dispersion of millions of gallons of oil spilled into the Gulf since the explosio

It proposes that Charles Darwin may have been wrong when he argued that competition was the major driving force of evolution.
World could run out of helium
Helium is one of the most widely used gases on the planet — from party balloons to MRI machine coolant — but it could soon be a thing of the past.
Fate of Universe revealed by galactic lens
Astronomers used the way that light from distant stars was distorted by a huge galactic cluster known as Abell 1689 to work out the amount of dark energy in the cosmos.
Hydrogen bonds captured on camera
Now these life-enabling bonds – essentially the force of attraction between one molecule's slightly positively charged hydrogen atoms, and negatively charged areas on a neighbouring molecule – seem to have been captured on camera.
UN board could rein in $2.7 billion carbon market
An obscure UN board that oversees a $2.7 billion market intended to cut heat-trapping gases has agreed to take steps that could lead to it eventually reining in what European and U.S. environmentalists are calling a huge scam.
La. scientist's oysters safe from oil, but pricey
Biologist John Supan thinks he has developed what may be the holy grail for oyster lovers: a hardy breed of the delectable shellfish that stays fat enough for consumers to eat throughout the year.
Radiation could pinpoint black hole merger
Astronomers may be able to get an early warning about where to look for merging black holes and study gravitational waves, thanks a new model created by Canadian and U.S. astrophysicists.
Moon shrinking with age
New research indicates cracks in the moon's crust that have formed as the interior has cooled and shrunk over the last billion years or so. That means the surface has shrunk, too, though not so you'd notice just from gazing at it.
Tsunami caused by 2 earthquakes, not 1
The deadly tsunami that pounded several South Pacific islands last year was spawned by not one but two monstrous earthquakes, surprising new research reveals.
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