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Laurentian's bees are prospecting for gold. Seriously.

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Your honey bees are on the payroll, eh?

Bonjour du Nord — c'est Sudbury, on lâche pas. Let's go.

Okay, so you know how sometimes you hear something and you gotta do a double-take? That was me this morning, reading about Laurentian University sending *honey bees* to work. Voyons donc! A researcher at Laurentian, Dr. Travis Steffler, is literally turning bees into tiny little prospectors, sending them out to track how well rehabilitation efforts are going at the Côté Gold Mine near Gogama. This isn't just about planting some trees and hoping for the best, eh? This is next-level, truly innovative stuff coming right out of our own backyard, from the campus up on the hill that we all care so much about.

### What's the Buzz About These Bees?

It's actually brilliant, if you think about it. Bees are out there anyway, collecting pollen and nectar. The idea here is that they'll also pick up trace elements from the soil and plants in the areas that have been rehabilitated after mining. Dr. Steffler and his team can then analyze what the bees bring back to the hive – literally testing the honey, pollen, and even the bees themselves – to see what minerals and metals are present. It's like having thousands of tiny, flying environmental monitors.

* This two-year project is funded by the Canadian Space Agency (weird, I know!).

* The goal is to see how successful the land reclamation efforts are at the Côté Gold Mine.

* The bees will essentially tell us if the soil is recovering, if new plants are taking hold, and if anything harmful is still lingering.

* It's a really sustainable, natural way to get data without a huge environmental footprint.

This is exactly the kind of innovation that makes me proud to be from Sudbury. We've gone from the Moonscape to the re-greening miracle, and now we're using bees to keep that progress going. It’s a testament to the fact that Laurentian, despite its struggles, is still a hub of serious, impactful research that matters for our whole region. For those of us who remember when the slag pours lit up the sky orange and the landscape around Copper Cliff was, well, stark, seeing this kind of science-driven rehabilitation is a huge deal. It’s proving, yet again, that what we broke, we can fix.

Bonjour du Nord — c'est Sudbury, on lâche pas. Let's go.

For more real Sudbury talk, you gotta catch the morning crew at mornings.live.

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More from Élodie Bélanger-Mikkonen

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →