UWindsor academic advisors Denis Tetreault, Danielle Handsor-Matias, and Chris O’Gorman served on the organizing committee for a conference of their peers this week.
UWindsor academic advisors Denis Tetreault, Danielle Handsor-Matias, and Chris O’Gorman served on the organizing committee for a conference of their peers this week.
Student recruitment officer Chris O’Gorman won Tuesday’s DailyNews trivia quiz and the prize of a pair of tickets to see the University Players perform the award-winning drama Dancing at Lughnasa.
Special types of fossil deposits allow us very rare clear views of what life was like hundreds of millions of years ago, says paleontologist Denis Tetreault of the earth and environmental sciences department.
He will explore some of those views in his free public presentation “Exceptional fossil preservation: important windows into the history of life,” Wednesday, February 15, at Canada South Science City.
His lecture begins at 7:30 p.m. and is part of the Science Café series, sponsored by the University’s Faculty of Science.