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  • 2012-05-06

    Campbell, Sandy

    Tamarack is a deciduous conifer. The sap and bark have been used by Indigenous people for healing purposes

  • 2012-05-06

    Campbell, Sandy

    Tamarack is a deciduous needle-leaf tree that grows from Newfoundland and Labrador west to Alaska. Tamarack grows well in wet, acidic areas, so populates peatland areas.

  • 2021-08-28

    Campbell, Sandy

    Fine china objects (plates, cups and saucers, bells, mugs, thimbles) are all popular items in the souvenir trade. Some souvenir stores have china objects decorated with themes local to their region. This cup and saucer were made and decorated in England, but decorated for the Yukon tourist...

  • 2009-01-01

    makelessnoise

    Photo of mother brushing child's molars

  • 2018

    University of Alberta, Department of Biological Sciences

    This image is of a test tube rack. This laboratory equipment is used in Introduction to Cell Biology: Biology 107 and MolecuLar Genetics and Heredity: Biology 207. This image was created as part of the University of Alberta OER image database project in Biological Sciences. Identifier 3005I.

  • 2020-01-01

    Giebelhaus, Johannes

    Pea seed development works like a clock: as time passes, seed size increases like the numbers of each passing hour. Seeds increase in size over development due to the expansion of cotyledons, the seed’s storage organs. The cotyledons swell as cells expand to accommodate the accumulation of...

  • 2021-01-01

    Adel, Amir

    Do you see the coloured pairs that look like seahorses? Imagine looking from the top at horizontal cuts in the human brain. When the anatomist, Arantius, saw the brain of a cadaver, he named each of those regions hippocampus or “seahorse” in Greek. Here, you are looking at brain images of two...

  • 2023-06-20

    Iqbal, Saad

    Submitted in the EDPS-537 (Indigenous Research Methodologies), the image is my digital land acknowledgment representing my positionality in Canada as an international student and guest on Indigenous lands. Each flipside has the same photograph of Edmonton's skyline taken near the River Lot 11,...

  • 2019-01-01

    Stenekes, Sydney

    This picture was taken following a day of fall fishing along the banks of Hay River, one of the culturally significant bodies of water to Kátł‘odeeche First Nation. Initially the community had invited me to travel by boat on Great Slave Lake to one of their traditional fish camps situated at the...

  • 2023-06-20

    Breedt, Ed

    Drawing from French post-structural philosopher, Gilles Deleuze, I examine what social and political forces caused physiotherapy to create the concept of the body-as-machine, reducing the body down to parts which wear out, require fixing, replacing, and realignment. I argue that Physiotherapy has...

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