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October 12, 2016

Nobel-winning astrophysicist among those awarded the Order of Nova Scotia

Arthur McDonald, a native of Sydney, N.S. who won the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics, is awarded the Order of Nova Scotia at Province House in Halifax on Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2016.

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew Vaughan

Arthur McDonald, a native of Sydney, N.S. who won the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics, is awarded the Order of Nova Scotia at Province House in Halifax on Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2016.

HALIFAX — Canadian astrophysicist Arthur McDonald — last year's winner of the Nobel physics prize — was among five people awarded the Order of Nova Scotia during a ceremony today at the provincial legislature.

McDonald, a retired professor originally from Sydney, N.S., was the co-winner of a Nobel prize for his work on subatomic particles known as neutrinos.

The province's highest honour was also awarded to Prof. Francoise Baylis, a Halifax-based expert in bioethics who teaches at Dalhousie University, and Doug Knockwood of Indian Brook, a Mi'kmaq elder who survived residential schooling, homelessness and alcoholism to become a spiritual leader for his people.

Another winner was Jim Morrow, artistic director of Mermaid Theatre in Windsor, whose larger-than-life puppets have thrilled audiences around the world.

Donald Reid of Joggins was invested into the Order of Nova Scotia for his lifelong work collecting fossils along the now-famous cliffs near his home.

His collection — 70 years in the making — represents the world’s most complete fossil record of terrestrial life of the Coal Age, dating back 300 million years.

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