Science & Earth
→ NewsStellar habitability in our neighbourhood focuses on long‑lived K‑type stars.
Astronomers completed a census of more than 2,000 nearby K‑type stars and obtained detailed spectra for 580 within 33 parsecs, identifying 529 mature, inactive K dwarfs as useful targets for terrestrial planet searches.
King Faisal Prize honors GLP-1 researcher Svetlana Mojsov and mathematician Carlos Kenig
The 2026 King Faisal Prize named Professor Svetlana Mojsov as the Medicine laureate for her work on glucagon-like peptide-1 and Professor Carlos Kenig as the Science (Mathematics) laureate for contributions to nonlinear partial differential equations.
Jupiter reaches opposition on January 10, 2026
Jupiter reaches opposition on January 10, 2026, appearing high in the northern winter sky; it will be about 4.23 AU from Earth around January 8 and shine near magnitude −2.7.
Vancouver Island First Nations criticize DFO for lack of consultation on krill fishery opening
First Nations on northern Vancouver Island say they were not adequately consulted after the Department of Fisheries and Oceans opened a commercial krill fishery on Jan. 5; DFO says the fishery is managed under a multi-year plan with precautionary catch limits and a 500-tonne total allowable catch.
German emissions cuts slow as North Sea records warmest year
Germany's greenhouse gas emissions fell by 1.5% in 2025, slowing from larger cuts in prior years, while the North Sea averaged 11.6C in 2025, the highest value in the BSH series since 1969.
Fiji offered more than a picture-perfect paradise
A visitor recounts time on Viti Levu and the Coral Coast, noting beaches, village hospitality, local cuisine and a coral replanting activity, while reporting that rising floods are reshaping some rural areas.
CECO Environmental to Present at Needham Growth Conference on Jan. 14
CECO Environmental announced management will participate in the 28th Annual Needham Growth Conference on January 14, 2026, and the presentation will be posted on the company's Investor Relations website.
Okanagan invasive species group asks RDOS to support adding dangerous plants to provincial control list
The Okanagan and Similkameen Invasive Species Society is asking the Regional District of Okanagan-Similkameen (RDOS) to request that 10 plant species be added to British Columbia's Weed Control Regulation Schedule A; the province plans to review and update the schedule this winter and the RDOS board will discuss the request at its Thursday meeting.
Zoo hosts electronics recycling drive to ease local disposal.
The Central Florida Zoo & Botanical Gardens partnered with Urban E Recycling for an electronics recycling event this past weekend, and visitors received a discount for dropping off unwanted devices.
Severe turbulence could double as engineers study bird-inspired plane designs.
Researchers link rising clear-air turbulence to climate-driven changes in the jet stream, reporting a 41–55% increase in severe events since 1979 in some regions and forecasts that severe episodes could double over North America, the North Pacific and Europe if emissions are not cut; engineers are testing bird-inspired wing features that have shown promise in small-scale trials.
Hot gas in a young galaxy cluster may reshape views of the early universe
Researchers led by the University of British Columbia report detecting unusually hot gas in the young galaxy cluster SPT2349-56, about 12 billion light‑years away, and published the result in Nature.
Free Will and the Clockwork Universe: Libet's Findings and Determinism
Benjamin Libet's 1980s experiments found a brain 'readiness potential' that began about 0.2 seconds before participants reported the conscious intention to move, and the article contrasts this finding with Laplace's articulation of causal determinism in physics.
Bright supernova observed using gravitational lensing for the first time
Astronomers report SN 2025wny, a superluminous supernova about 10 billion light-years away, was the first to be spatially resolved after its light was magnified and split by foreground galaxies.
Galaxy that never formed is identified as a starless dark-matter cloud.
Astronomers report that Cloud 9, a nearby gas cloud about 14 million light-years away, contains neutral hydrogen but shows no detectable stars; follow-up Hubble imaging supports its identification as a Reionization-Limited H I Cloud (RELHIC). The finding aligns with a Lambda-CDM prediction that some dark-matter haloes can remain starless.
Precision diagnostics reimagined for rapid disease detection
The article reports researcher Shanmukha Sreenivas Madras is developing adjusted culture methods and multiplex qPCR assays to speed molecular diagnosis and has created quality-management frameworks to support clinical validation.
CleanBC review calls for renewal, not retreat.
An independent review found CleanBC has cut emissions about 20% below 2007 levels but will likely meet only about half of its 2030 target; the report recommends renewing the program and speeding electrification.
Cold snap grips Europe and five people have died
Officials reported five people died in weather-related accidents as a cold snap brought temperatures below -12C in parts of Britain and caused widespread travel disruption in the Netherlands and at Amsterdam's Schiphol airport.
Canada's melting glaciers continue rapid loss through 2025
Researchers report that B.C. and western North American glaciers lost an estimated 30 gigatonnes of mass in 2025, the second‑worst year on record, and a 2021–24 study found only 2023 was worse.
Yukon trapper Robert Stitt reflects on a solitary life in the bush and why he left his Beaver River trapline
Robert Stitt, 75, has given up his Beaver River trapline this year, citing rising aircraft costs and the threat of wildfires after a near-loss of his camp in 2021; he says he plans to find a different trapline and be out next winter.
Exoplanet habitability depends on a clearer picture of stellar flaring.
A white paper submitted to ESO's Expanding Horizons initiative calls for broader, high-cadence observations of stellar flares because many potentially habitable planets orbit active M dwarfs and flares can alter planetary atmospheres.
Dalhousie prof helps find galaxy cluster with hot gas 1.4 billion years after Big Bang
A team including a Dalhousie University professor studied a young galaxy cluster, SPT2349-56, seen about 1.4 billion years after the Big Bang and found its gas to be roughly five times hotter than current models predict.
Ultramassive black holes diverge from the M–sigma relation.
A study measured masses for eight ultramassive black holes in brightest cluster galaxies and found they lie above the extrapolated M–sigma relation, while the size of a galaxy's central light-deficit correlated more closely with black hole mass.
XRISM provides sharpest X-ray view yet of a rapidly spinning black hole
XRISM, together with XMM-Newton and NuSTAR, produced the sharpest X‑ray spectrum of the Seyfert galaxy MCG‑6‑30‑15 and isolated a broadened iron emission line that indicates material orbiting close to its supermassive black hole.
Top 10 science stories of 2025, according to Bob McDonald
CBC's Bob McDonald lists ten notable science stories from 2025, highlighting the Vera C. Rubin Observatory's first images and published analyses of asteroid samples that found organic molecules.
Toronto's seven new buildings are reshaping its reputation.
In 2025 experts highlighted seven new Toronto projects — from Biidaasige Park to Limberlost Place — for their design, public benefits and use of sustainable and community-focused approaches.
Drift logs are damaging intertidal ecosystems in B.C., study finds.
A University of Victoria study found 20–80% fewer barnacles on rocks exposed to drift logs and reports a roughly 520% increase in drift logs along western B.C. shores since the late 19th century.
Salmon return as Indigenous nations from the Klamath to the Okanagan lead restoration
Indigenous-led efforts helped reconnect the Klamath River and rebuild Okanagan sockeye runs, with dam removals on the Klamath and an Indigenous-run hatchery and restoration work in the Okanagan supporting recent salmon returns.
Snow levels hit record at select West Kootenay stations
The Redfish Creek automated snow station recorded its highest Jan. 1 level since installation about 25 years ago, and the West Kootenay region's seven stations show snowpack at 112% of normal, the B.C. River Forecast Centre reported.
Northern lights visible across much of Canada tonight
The U.S. Space Weather Prediction Center forecasted the aurora for Friday night, with most provinces and territories having a relatively high chance of seeing the northern lights; Saturday is expected to have a much lower likelihood. The agency noted the best viewing window is reported as between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m., away from urban light and with an open view of the northern horizon.
Using Webb, Canadian team maps the Milky Way's turbulent youth.
A Canadian team used JWST and Hubble imaging of 877 'Milky Way twin' galaxies to reconstruct the Galaxy's evolution and found a merger-rich, turbulent early phase followed by later inside-out disk growth.
