Skip to main content

Northern Lights Tour: Wisconsin science hits the road

July 20, 2015 By Terry Devitt

Science will light up the night in northern Wisconsin this summer as scientists and educators from UW–Madison and UW-Extension hit the road for the first Northern Lights Tour, a five-stop exposition of research with local and regional impact.

The tour, an extension of UW–Madison’s Wednesday Nite@the Lab, produced in conjunction with UW-Extension and Wisconsin Public Television (WPT), will swing across the northern parts of Wisconsin beginning July 27 in Sturgeon Bay and concluding July 31 in Barron. Stops in between include Marinette, Rhinelander and Ashland.

The two-hour programs will feature talks on the National Ice Age Trail, Wisconsin beaches, maritime archaeology, aquaculture, wild rice, avian influenza and bats, among other topics. The events will take place from 7 to 9 p.m. and are free and open to the public. WPT will also record the talks for later broadcast on its University Place series and the programs will be available for streaming in archive at wpt.org/universityplace.

Dates, venues and topics for the tour include:

  • July 27, Crossroads at Big Creek in Sturgeon Bay, with talks on the National Ice Age Trail, Wisconsin beaches, and Door County maritime archaeology.
  • July 28, Theatre on the Bay at UW-Marinette, featuring presentations on challenges on forest and wildlife management, trends in Wisconsin biotechnology, and the environmental restoration of Menekaunee Harbor.
  • July 29, Rhinelander High School, with talks on potato breeding in the north woods and the Wisconsin Bat Project.
  • July 30, Northern Great Lakes Visitor Center in Ashland, profiling northern Wisconsin’s hazelnut industry, aquaculture, and concentrated animal feeding operations.
  • July 31, Barron Area Community Center, with talks on reclaiming nonmetallic mining sites, avian influenza, and the history of wild rice.

Subscribe to Wisconsin Ideas

Want more stories of the Wisconsin Idea in action? Sign-up for our monthly e-newsletter highlighting how Badgers are taking their education and research beyond the boundaries of the classroom to improve lives.