
Where’s Bruno?
The nuclear heritage group (officially the Society for the Preservation of Canada’s Nuclear Heritage Inc.,

The nuclear heritage group (officially the Society for the Preservation of Canada’s Nuclear Heritage Inc.,

The precautions needed when using uranium and other similar radioactive materials are now well known;

The Nuclear Heritage group have been collecting a wide range of articles related to various

In addition to collecting artifacts directly dealing with nuclear research and the nuclear industry, the

It’s a wonderful photograph, black and white, two corners folded over, with creases and speckles.

The anecdotes that the Society for the Preservation of Canada’s Nuclear Heritage Inc. (SPCNHI) has

by James Ungrin and C. Saunders. A significant number of industrial applications for high-power electron beams at an energy of around 10 MeV began to look very promising in the early 1980s.

by Morgan Brown et al. Overview of the evolution of nuclear science and technology in Canada.

The town of Deep River and the adjacent Chalk River facility began in 1944, to create a pilot plant for the production of plutonium.

The Canadian nuclear timeline that led to the development of CANDU had its beginnings in what are referred to as the “Montreal Labs”.

A video produced for the 17th International Conference on Radiation Science (Montreal, Aug 2023) on

Our President, Morgan Brown, recently gave a talk on Canada’s Nuclear Story for the Ontario

Morgan Brown wrote this article for the North Renfrew Times about former President Jimmy Carter’s role in the cleanup following the NRX accident in 1952,