KMC 27 – The Science Issue

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It was one of our staple classes during grade school. The mystery behind iridescent glowing mobile devices revealed. How that cedar tree keeps growing in the backyard. It is, quite simply, how everything works: you, your home, oceans, planets, galaxies, universes and beyond. Science.

As a practice, science is an endeavour exclusive to our species—at least on this planet. The word comes from the Latin “scientia,” meaning “knowledge,” but the modern vestige evokes the notion of humans systematically studying processes through observation and experiment. So while the world works in truly mysterious ways, with atoms and chemical compounds and laws of thermodynamics, science doesn’t exist without us trying to figure those puzzles out. No names or microscopes. No theories or formulas. It just is. Science is more curiosity than data. It’s us trying to answer the undying questions that have driven us to spaceships and particle accelerators. The question “how?” is the inquiry that always seems to follow the giant.

So here’s our stab at being all scientific—quenching our thirst for what is baffling by trying to understand the fascinating things spinning our mountain-culture world round and round. From beer to geological formations, grizzly to sturgeon, iPhone apps to psychoactive plants, even profiles of Kootenay scientists. Time to geek out.

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As long as an alligator and with the hide of a prehistoric pachyderm, she has lurked the Kootenay River system since before World War I….

With the world all a-Twitter over anything shareable, those hired to sell British Columbia’s adventure-tourism products using brochures and mountain-media advertorials now have to understand…

University of Montana glaciologist Joel Harper is breaking new ice in climate science. Working from missoula and Whitefish, University of Montana professor Joel Harper, 49,…

The usual adjectives to describe Kiesza’s rise to fame—rapid, dizzying, meteoric—don’t do justice to the surreal magnitude of what the Calgary singer has achieved. In…

The baseline of the Kootenay freshwater life cycle is populated by millions of one particularly beautiful yet hardy fish: the trout. Close relative to both…

From Incan empires to Escobar and Obama, the coca plant has for centuries been deeply rooted in religion, industry and war. Coveted since ancient times…

In his editor’s introduction of the March 2015 issue of Canada’s The Walrus magazine, John MacFarlane bids readers farewell and introduces the publication’s new editor, Jonathan Kay. MacFarlane tells readers they may be surprised to learn Kay didn’t receive an arts education, as they might expect, but that his undergraduate and master’s degrees were in metallurgical engineering.