Medicine & TechnologyThe melting of Arctic ice sheet are commonly associated with the global warming. Read on to know more about a new factor that brings sinkholes in the northern hemisphere's seafloors.
Since 2008, Europe and Canada have celebrated Rare Disease Day at the end of February-on 29 February in leap years and on 28 February in all other years. The day was proclaimed by EURORDIS, an alliance of patient organizations, in order to raise awareness of the special challenges in treating and researching rare diseases.
Brain illness has arisen in the Canadian province of New Brunswick over the last two years, with victims complaining of a range of worrying symptoms like swift and substantial weight loss, hallucinations, insomnia, and problems thinking clearly, and decreased mobility.
After assuming his asthma had worsened as a result of a historic heat wave, a British Columbia emergency room doctor diagnosed the patient with "climate change."
Canada and more than 20 more countries are pledging tough actions to reduce methane actions by an average of 30% by 2030 from its 2020 levels ahead of the COP26 in Glasgow.
The shortage of ivermectin experienced by people intending to buy for non-COVID purposes pushed the Canadian government to limit people from purchasing the said drug.
Late last month, pilots from two aircrafts said they witnessed a mysterious bright green object that vanished into the clouds. These sightings did not impact any of the operations of the two flights.
Extreme heat temperature in Canada is cooking sea creatures, like mussels, clams, and shells to death. Infrared cameras reveal that shorelines could reach above 50C.
Six years after they were first reported, debilitating neurological symptoms have shaken the province of New Brunswick and still have doctors in Canada stumped.
Canadian doctors are investigating a mystery brain disease that has infected people in New Brunswick. The province is tracking 48 cases and six people are believed to have died from the disease.
A new study based on 23 years of lake data near Rankin Inlet in Nunavut, Canada, reveals an unusual behavior on how these lakes respond to climate change.