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Iconic: Barosaurus
This rare, longnecked sauropod skeleton is the largest mounted dinosaur in Canada stretching 90 feet long across the James and Louise Temerty Galleries of the Age of Dinosaurs. The barosaurus is just one of the Royal Ontario Museum's iconic objects.
Les mâts totémiques
Nos quatre totems sont l’œuvre des Nisga’as et des Haïdas de la côte canadienne du Pacifique; ils parlent d’origines familiales, de droits, de privilèges, de hauts faits et d’expériences.
Story of Nubia
This short documentary tells the story of Nubia and the civilization that flourished in the Nile Valley for thousands of years and particularly between 800 BC and 400 AD. The Galleries of Africa: Nubia at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto allow visitors to explore an exxtraordiary ancient legacy
Iconic: Earl of Pembroke's Armour
Made in King Henry VIII's royal workshop, this suit of armour is one of only three of its kind on display in the world. One of the Royal Ontario Museum's iconic objects, see the suit in the Samuel European Galleries.
History Wars: Canada is not Bilingual, Binational or Bicultural (Part 3 of 4)
Moderator: Michael Bliss, Canadian historian and award-winning author Pro: David Bercuson, Canadian labour, military, and political historian Con: Antonia Maioni, Associate Professor at McGill University, in the Department of Political Science and the Institute for Health and Social Policy It was
History Wars: Canada is not Bilingual, Binational or Bicultural (Part 2 of 4)
Moderator: Michael Bliss, Canadian historian and award-winning author Pro: David Bercuson, Canadian labour, military, and political historian Con: Antonia Maioni, Associate Professor at McGill University, in the Department of Political Science and the Institute for Health and Social Policy It was