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Paul Sereno is coming to the ROM!

Paul Sereno, one of my FAVOURITE palaeontologists, is coming to @ROMToronto this Sunday and I could not be be MORE excited. Except for maybe those times when I was a kid… (cue time travel sound effect- swosh swish swash) When I was a kid I had a pretty strict bed time. For grades 3 through 5,

Google Hangout: In conversation with Paul Nicklen

Google Hangout: In conversation with Paul Nicklen

Join us on November 12 for a very special Google+ Hangout on Air with wildlife photographer Paul Nicklen. Paul  uses his camera to reveal the nature of the changing polar regions due to the effects of a warming planet.  We will talk to Paul about his work in documenting nature as well as his work

Staff Favourites: Paul Kane Paintings

Staff Favourites: Paul Kane Paintings

Technician Liliane Lortie talks about the Paul Kane paintings on display in the Daphne Cockwell Gallery dedicated to First Peoples art & culture.

The First Brush: Paul Kane and Infrared Photography

The First Brush: Paul Kane and Infrared Photography

A collaboration between the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM), Toronto, and Queen's University, Kingston, this research project has photographed in the infrared spectrum the Paul Kane collection of oil paintings housed at the ROM. Video produced by Michael Fergusson, MA candidate, Queen's

The 99%: Paul Roberts on Pompeii and Herculaneum

The 99%: Paul Roberts on Pompeii and Herculaneum

Paul Roberts will be giving a (sold out) lecture titled “What happens in Pompeii, stays in Pompeii: Sexuality in the Roman World” at the ROM on December 8. Here, Sascha Priewe speaks to Paul about curating the exhibition Life and Death in Pompeii and Herculaneum at the British Museum in 2013.

Adventures in the Great Bear Rainforest: from the Royal Ontario Museum to the wilds of British Columbia with Paul Nicklen

Adventures in the Great Bear Rainforest: from the Royal Ontario Museum to the wilds of British Columbia with Paul Nicklen

By guest blogger   Paul Esposti, 2016  Environmental Visual Communication Program  graduate. It’s September 2016, although I’ve lost track of the days. But it’s September and I’m in Northern British Columbia and being dry is a distant memory as I lay in a damp field surrounded by tall