While sort of basic, this was helpful for my visual learners and students still not grasping what Climate Change can look like. Click on the four different themes (increasing temp, rising sea level what ifs, etc.).
I would not show the entire "documentary" but the small clips of what would happen if .... are interesting to the freshmen....Six degrees of global warming could mean a global wipe-out.
My Kids had a LOT of questions about this....Check this one out...Long-term weather forecasters say it is now unlikely that a strong El Niño will develop this fall, dimming hopes in California for heavy rains that might bring relief from a severe drought.
Click on the "EARTH" icon and choose various options. It is Trippy!!!! An animated map of global wind and weather. Visit the community at https://www.facebook.com/EarthWindMap
What do the climate experts say? How do scientists know the climate is changing? Climatica provides scientifically accurate information from the experts.
It is not every day you can announce the discovery of thousands of new mountains on Earth, but that is what a US-European research team has done. What is more, these peaks are all at least 1.5km high. The reason they have gone unrecognised until now is because they are at the bottom of the ocean.
BBC News looks at how time zones affect all of our lives. Cool little link about time zones. Click "Continue" then scroll down to see the scroll bar. There are various clips about important time zones.
I plan to show this one to the WG/PreAPWG students soon as part of the early discussion of over-generalizing/stereotypes which I find is something common with many students - especially the freshmen. It is a great TED talk.