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Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Water 602 - Collaborative Water Program

The interdisciplinary Water 602 class (Collaborative Water Program) explored the complexity of issues in the Grand River during a week of field trips and discussions with water mangers in government, industry, NGO and academia.  

Follow our adventure at:

Friday, May 27, 2016

Stormwater concerns

Mark Servos comments on the potential concerns and impacts of stormwater entering teh Grand River ().

Monday, May 9, 2016

Oil spill in the Grand River

Grand River spill a 'wake-up call' to ݮƵ region

A spill of used motor oil into a storm sewer coats the banks of the Grand River in Kitchener. Mark Servos makes comments on environmental impacts of oil and other pollutants entering the Grand River.

Thursday, January 14, 2016

SOWC funding for water innovation.

Mark Servos and others comment on the importance of water research to Canada's health and the economy at an event where Prime Minister Trudeau announced $12 Million for Southern Ontario Water Consortium Water Canada, January 14, 2016. .  

Visit the site at https://sowc.ca/

Shawn McCarthy from the Globe and Mail visited the Grand River with our team in early November to talk about our research and its implications for the local watershed as well as Great Lakes.  The in the newspaper highlighted the improvements in the river resulting from the investments made in wastewater treatment by the local communities.

Sunday, November 29, 2015

Langmuir article impact recognized

Our recent paper (Xu Zhang, Mark R. Servos, and Juewen Liu, Surface Science of DNA Adsorption onto Citrate-Capped Gold Nanoparticles. Langmuir 2012. 28 (8), 3896-3902. doi: 10.1021/la205036p) was selected as one of the most important Langmuir articles published over its history; “seminal advances that the Langmuir editors consider to have had the most influence in the community of surface science and colloid science that the journal was founded to serve”.

Congratulations biology graduate student Shari Cater on receiving the Dr. Richard Playle Award for Outstanding MSc Thesis in Aquatic Toxicology for her work on “Historical trends of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans in fish and sediment associated with two bleached kraft pulp mills in northern Ontario”.