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Canada Science and Technology Museum

The Canada Science and Technology Museum collects and preserves objects and data relating to scientific and technological history and development in Canada. It also carries out research, and sponsors exhibits and public programs. The museum is located in Ottawa, Ontario.

Museum History

The Canada Science and Technology Museum had its roots in the Geological Survey of Canada museum (1842), renamed the National Museum of Canada in 1927. In 1966 a separate Science and Technology Branch was created, under its own director, and small collections of artifacts that had been under the trusteeship of other branches of the National Museum were transferred to it. In April 1967 a warehouse on the outskirts of Ottawa was put at its disposal, and the museum was opened to the public on 16 November 1967. The following year it became the National Museum of Science and Technology, a part of the National Museums of Canada. In 2000, it became the Canada Science and Technology Museum. The museum is operated by Ingenium: Canada’s Science and Innovation Museums, which also administers two other national museums in Ottawa: the Canada Agriculture Museum and the Canada Aviation and Space Museum.

Museum Collections, Programming and Exhibits

The Canada Science and Technology Museum collects and preserves objects and data relating to scientific and technological history and development in Canada. It also carries out research, and sponsors exhibits and public programs. Major subject areas include pure science (mathematics, physics, chemistry), astronomy, transportation, communication, agriculture, forestry, fishing, extractive industries, industrial technology, energy, aviation and space, marine technology, fire technology, graphic arts technology, medical technology and photography. Collections total approximately 20,000 artifact lots with 60,000 individual objects, and 80,000 photos as well as associated archival material. The museum also holds the CN Photo Collection, a collection of 750,000 Canadian photographs, some of which date back to the early days of photography in the 1850s. CN donated the photographs to the museum in 1999, and many of the images can now be accessed online in the CN Images of Canada Gallery on the museum's website.

The museum's observatory houses Canada's largest refracting telescope, obtained from the Dominion Observatory, which is used for education programs. Other public programming activities include daily presentations on such topics as cryogenics and electricity; artifact demonstrations; travelling exhibitions; publications; school programs; astronomy programs; sleepovers; birthday parties; and special events every month on a range of topics, from fighting fires to the technology of beauty. Exhibitions, both continuing and temporary, use innovative design and display methods and stress visitor participation.

The Canada Science and Technology Museum has been in the forefront of developing modern museum practices, with experiments in the use of computers, in registration procedures, traffic management studies, analysis of visitor patterns, and the use of the outdoor surroundings of the museum as a technology park. Its expertise in restoration of heavy objects, particularly those in transportation, has been made available to museums both nationally and internationally.