#UofG | An unexploded WWII-era bomb threw Paris transportation into chaos last week.
Dr. @AlexSouchen speaks to @GlobalNews about the history of these bombs and modern safety concerns.
@UoG_ARTS
Watch: https://t.co/D92lMmufD2
The Open Doors Program provides a Research Honorarium ($1000) for #UofGuelph Indigenous and Black students who are registered in a faculty-guided independent research project for credit at the 4000-level.
🗓️Application Deadline: Jan 12
👉🏽More info: https://t.co/NBP3CAtlwP
“The first Trump administration altered or deleted numerous federal web pages containing public-facing climate information, according to monitoring efforts by the nonprofit @EnviroDGI, which tracks changes on federal websites.”
https://t.co/4DvSd6hLhR
The Slave Wrecks Project is rewriting history using underwater archaeology. Their research confirms that African captives tried to resist captivity in the Middle Passage.
This @guardian article explores wreckage of a slave ship where mutiny took place: https://t.co/44JiuQnFFu
We are devastated to learn of the loss of our beloved leader and Elder, Mizana Giizhik, His Honour, Murray Sinclair. His tireless work to advance the rights of Indigenous Peoples and ensure the legacy of residential school Survivors will never be forgotten.
#UofG | What's the history behind unexploded bombs from the Second World War buried in southern Ontario?
Dr. @AlexSouchen speaks to @CBCKW891.
@UoG_ARTS @UGuelphHist
Listen: https://t.co/geJsZDyvC9
#UofG | “They remain dangerous as both an energetic threat and a toxic threat. They should never be touched.”
Dr. @AlexSouchen speaks to @WR_Record about unexploded munitions in sites across Canada.
@UoG_ARTS @UGuelphHist
Read more: https://t.co/ZUIthXEE8E
#UofG | Dr. Alex Souchen is available for interviews about unexploded bombs in a bog near Ottawa. The bombs are from the Second World War, when the area was used as a practice range.
@UoG_ARTS @UGuelphHist #ExpertAlert
Read more: https://t.co/rF1fOpBKbt
#UofG | Dr. Alex Souchen speaks to @CBCOttawa about unexploded bombs from the Second World War that are buried in the bottom of the Mer Bleue bog.
@UoG_ARTS @UGuelphHist
Listen: https://t.co/dDL0Hp44uD
@davidpugliese@OttawaCitizen Interesting article @davidpugliese. Turning old bombing ranges into wildlife conservation areas is common. I also wonder what types of surveys they've completed. In Europe magnetometers are used to locate metal from UXOs at dumpsites. So there are ways to locate all the bombs...
Large numbers of high explosive bombs from WW2 are still sitting in the Mer Bleue bog. But military experts believe the 500-pound and 1,000-pound bombs pose a low risk as long as they remain undisturbed by the public.
https://t.co/bKSNkgeKr4 via @ottawacitizen