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Gwen Noda

Webcast: 'We Sea Change,' a Climate Change Education Video | The Ocean Portal | Smithso... - 0 views

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    Webcast: 'We Sea Change,' a Climate Change Education Video 0 What is climate change, and how is it affecting coastal Carolina? That is the question that a group of teens from Isaac Bear Early College High School set out to answer for their Third National Student Summit on the Ocean & Coasts project. Representing the North Carolina Aquarium at Fort Fisher, four teens spent months researching climate change issues such as salt water intrusion in rivers, changes to barrier islands, disappearing beaches, and habitat loss in longleaf pine forests in the Wilmington, N.C., region. The students presented a video documenting this research during the National Student Summit on February 15, 2011 at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History. After the Summit, the team broadened the project's scope to include climate change education through the production of a second video. This film, We Sea Change, aims to give their local community in Wilmington an understanding of climate change, impacts on the coastal Carolina region, and how people can be part of the climate change solution. We Sea Change will be broadcast live to the Ocean Portal from the North Carolina Aquarium at Fort Fisher on Wednesday, September 28, 2011 at 7pm. There will be a panel discussion on climate change immediately following the 7pm screening. Meet the team! The Cape Fear Beach Bears: Sandy Paws for a Cause team members include students Jessica Lama, Keela Sweeney, Evan Lucas, and Dustin Chambers. They have conducted research and produced their videos under the guidance of teachers Bryan Bishop from Isaac Bear Early College High School and Megan Ennes from the North Carolina Aquarium at Fort Fisher.
Gwen Noda

The Ocean Project - 0 views

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    The Ocean Project conducts market research, with funding provided by NOAA and in collaboration with the Monterey Bay Aquarium and National Aquarium in Baltimore. Our national research from 2008 provides a comprehensive metric for future evaluations, and we are conducting semi-annual tracking surveys to measure changes and test messages on climate, ocean, and related environmental issues.
Gwen Noda

NR12.01 WHSA Announces 2012 Summer HS Programs - 0 views

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    "Woods Hole Science Aquarium Announces 2012 Summer Programs for High School Students"
Gwen Noda

Aquarium of the Pacific Event | Flotsametrics and the Floating World - 0 views

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    Aquarium Event Flotsametrics and the Floating World Curtis Ebbesmeyer As an oceanographer for Mobil/Standard Oil, Dr. Curtis Ebbesmeyer was fascinated by sea currents and eddies and began to focus on beaches and the debris deposited on them.
Gwen Noda

Aquarium of the Pacific Event | Merchants of Doubt - 0 views

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    Aquarium Event Merchants of Doubt Naomi Oreskes How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming
Gwen Noda

Once Upon A Tide - 0 views

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    Background: The 10 minute education film is part of Healthy Ocean, Healthy Humans a project of the Center for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School. The film was produced for aquariums, museums, schools, and theaters - to help people understand that all life on Earth, including our own, depends on the ocean.
Gwen Noda

USC researcher experiments with changing ocean chemistry | 89.3 KPCC - 0 views

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    "USC researcher experiments with changing ocean chemistry Jan. 19, 2011 | Molly Peterson | KPCC In his lab, USC's Dave Hutchins is simulating possible future atmospheres and temperatures for the Earth. He says he's trying to figure out how tiny organisms that form the base of the food web will react to a more carbon-intense ocean. Burning fossil fuels doesn't just put more carbon into the atmosphere and help warm the climate. It's also changing the chemistry of sea water. KPCC's Molly Peterson visits a University of Southern California researcher who studies the consequences of a more corrosive ocean. Tailpipes and refineries and smokestacks as far as the eye can see in Los Angeles symbolize the way people change the planet's climate. They remind Dave Hutchins that the ocean's changing too. Hutchins teaches marine biology at USC. He says about a third of all the carbon, or CO2, that people have pushed into earth's atmosphere ends up in sea water - "which is a good thing for us because if the ocean hadn't taken up that CO2 the greenhouse effect would be far more advanced than it is." He smiles. Hutchins says that carbon is probably not so good for the ocean. "The more carbon dioxide that enters the ocean the more acidic the ocean gets." On the pH scale, smaller numbers represent more acidity. The Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute estimates we've pumped 500 million tons of carbon into the world's oceans. Dave Hutchins at USC says that carbon has already lowered the pH value for sea water. "By the end of this century we are going to have increased the amount of acid in the ocean by maybe 200 percent over natural pre-industrial levels," he says. "So we are driving the chemistry of the ocean into new territory - into areas that it has never seen." Hutchins is one of dozens of scientists who study the ripples of that new chemistry into the marine ecosystem. Now for an aside. I make bubbly water at home with a soda machine, and to do that, I pump ca
Gwen Noda

Teacher Resources | The Otter Spotter Blog - 0 views

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    Welcome to the Otter Spotter Blog! Otter Spotter is a collaborative project for the Seneca Park Zoo, Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA), and the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT). Content is complied by Emily Coon-Frisch who currently works as the On-Site Education Coordinator at the Seneca Park Zoo, serves as a Education Advisor for the AZA's Otter Species Survival Committee, and is graduate student at RIT.
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