Madeline Dunnett's profile photo

Madeline Dunnett

Courtenay

Journalist at The Discourse

Journalist with @thediscourse @UBCJournalism '23 MJ

Featured in: Favicon thediscourse.ca Favicon cbc.ca Favicon therecord.com Favicon thetyee.ca Favicon thespec.com Favicon castanet.net Favicon abbynews.com Favicon biv.com Favicon stcatharinesstandard.ca Favicon vicnews.com

Articles

  • 3 weeks ago | capitaldaily.ca | Madeline Dunnett

    IndigenousNewsBased on facts either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Marmot bones and charcoal found in remote alpine caves have distinct human markings dating back 2,400 years. Get the news and events in Victoria, in your inbox every morning. Thank you! Your submission has been received!Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

  • 3 weeks ago | cheknews.ca | Madeline Dunnett |Ethan Morneau

    About 40 people gathered at a small church in Cumberland to learn about where their water comes from — and why it’s at risk — on World Water Day. Though the gathering on Saturday was small, its topics were big. Preserving glaciers was the international theme of this year’s global event, which the United Nations has marked since 1993.

  • 4 weeks ago | thespec.com | Madeline Dunnett

    About 40 people gathered at a small church in Cumberland to learn about where their water comes from — and why it’s at risk — on World Water Day. Though the gathering on Saturday was small, its topics were big. Preserving glaciers was the international theme of this year’s global event, which the United Nations has marked since 1993.

  • 4 weeks ago | thediscourse.ca | Madeline Dunnett

    About 40 people gathered at a small church in Cumberland to learn about where their water comes from — and why it’s at risk — on World Water Day. Though the gathering on Saturday was small, its topics were big. Preserving glaciers was the international theme of this year’s global event, which the United Nations has marked since 1993.

  • 4 weeks ago | cheknews.ca | Madeline Dunnett

    On a sunny day in the summer of 2023, Jessie Everson was sitting in an alpine meadow, sketching marmots. He wasn’t relaxing though. He was working as a field technician for the Marmot Recovery Foundation, and the little rodents he was observing were Canada’s most endangered mammal, the Vancouver Island Marmot. The Marmot Recovery Foundation was founded in 1999 in response to growing calls from scientists and community members for more action to stop the creatures from going extinct.

Contact details

Socials & Sites

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →

X (formerly Twitter)

Followers
114
Tweets
219
DMs Open
No
No Tweets found.