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Courtney Wilson

Geospatial Revolution Project - 1 views

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    We live in the Global Location Age. "Where am I?" is being replaced by, "Where am I in relation to everything else?" The Geospatial Revolution Project is an integrated public service media and outreach initiative about the world of digital mapping and how it is changing the way we think, behave, and interact. Mission The mission of the Geospatial Revolution Project is to expand public knowledge about the history, applications, related privacy and legal issues, and the potential future of location-based technologies. Geospatial information influences nearly everything. Seamless layers of satellites, surveillance, and location-based technologies create a worldwide geographic knowledge base vital to solving myriad social and environmental problems in the interconnected global community. We count on these technologies to: * fight climate change * map populations across continents, countries, and communities * track disease * strengthen bonds between cultures * assist first responders in protecting safety * enable democracy * navigate our personal lives
Nancy Trautmann

Pollinator Partnership - 2 views

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    Free ecoregion-specific planting guides. You can find out which ecoregion you live in by entering your zip code.
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    Awesome guide.
Nancy Trautmann

NSF News - Animal Species Large and Small Follow Same Rule for How Common They Are in E... - 1 views

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    Animal species all follow the same rule for how common they are in an ecosystem, scientists have discovered. And the rule is simple. Everything from birds to fishes, crabs to snails to worms, and the parasitic animals that live inside or on them, follows it. "You can predict how common something might be just by knowing its body weight--how big an individual is--and how high up the food chain it is," says biologist Ryan Hechinger , lead author of a paper in this week's issue of the journal Science.
Nancy Trautmann

Right Whale Listening Network, Cornell, Bioacoustics - 1 views

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    This website explains the high-tech systems used by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology to hear, monitor, and protect endangered North Atlantic right whales, and you can see live info about where these whales have been detected within the past 24 hours.
Donna Erikson

Explore Biology | Regents Biology Teaching & Learning Resources - 0 views

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    Welcome to the AP Biology Web site for Ms. Foglia's Regents Biology (10th grade Living Environment) course at Division Avenue High School, Levittown. It will be a busy year and I will use this Web site to help you to do the best you can. All paperwork, labs, and resources used or mentioned in class will be posted here
Nancy Trautmann

Classroom | MpalaLive - 0 views

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    Live webcams at Mpala Research Center in Kenya, and lessons for grades 3-8
Nancy Trautmann

Developed vs developing maps | History Tech - 0 views

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    "Let kids discover things on their own. Let them solve problems. One way to do this is ask questions about maps. But not just regular, turn to page 47 in your geography textbook kind of maps. But, you know, cool maps. So here ya go. A world map using only the locations of the world's runways, helicopter pads and airports." What questions can you ask? How about: Where are the developing countries? How do you know? Does location make a difference in who has access to knowledge? Does this matter? How does access to electricity impact how people live?
Michelle Watkins

CULTURE - Amazing 13 Year-Old Kenyan Invents LED System That Protects Livestock, Lions ... - 0 views

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    " Richard Turere, a 13 year-old from Kenya, has been making waves at the TED conference with his innovative invention - a LED system that prevents lions from killing livestock (and also humans). Richard, whose family lives within the Nairobi National Park boundaries and raises livestock, had always seen lions as a threat to their livelihood."
Courtney Wilson

New Discoveries in Deep-Sea Biodiversity : NPR - 0 views

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    Up next, 30,000 species under the sea. A few years ago, marine biologists working off the coast of Oregon collected samples of seawater from the very deepest parts of the ocean there at two sites near an active ocean floor volcano. And once the samples are brought to the surface, biologists on the other side of the country, in Massachusetts, analyzed the samples to find out what kinds of microbes were living at the bottom of the ocean. And what they found was astonishing. An amazing array of microbes, more than 30,000 species many, which were never - have never been seen before. They are new to science. The results of that analysis were published earlier this month in the journal Science.
Nancy Trautmann

Flying Transformers: Birds Gear Up for Migration | Wired.com - 0 views

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    "Some species, such as warblers, which can weigh less than an ounce but fly 2,500 miles without resting, double their body weights in preparation for the voyage.To put it in a human perspective, if you were going to put on a lot of fat and try to live off it while doing a cross-country run, you would die," said Russell Greenberg, head of the National Zoo's Migratory Bird Center. "There's no human equivalent.""
Nancy Trautmann

Hummingbird Nest Cam - 3 views

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    Live footage showing the nest of a Channel Island Allen hummingbird in Orange County, California. She has been laying 4 to 5 clutches each year for several years.
Courtney Wilson

A Scientist Working to Improve Lives Through Conservation: Conservation International - 0 views

  • Rosimeiry Portela: A Scientist Working to Improve Lives Through Conservation 
  • Portela is always looking to social components for models of conservation, noting the differences in Brazilian and Finnish conservation efforts. Brazilians, for example, are increasingly aware of environmental issues, but development concerns are still at the forefront of their political agenda, and inequality remains one of the worst in the world. “There is very little inequality in Finland and a high level of agreement among politicians for conservation,” says Portela.
Courtney Wilson

What's it like where you live? - 1 views

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    Created by Missouri Botanical Garden, describes biomes of the world.
Nancy Trautmann

A Scientist Extols the Value of Forests Shaped by Humans - 0 views

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    Political ecologist Susanna Hecht has incurred the wrath of some conservationists by arguing that the notion of the primeval forest is largely a myth and that disturbed forests play a vital ecological function. In an interview with Yale Environment 360, she makes the case for a "new rurality" that places less emphasis on protected forests and more on the areas where people live.
Nancy Trautmann

Google To Deliver The Amazon Jungle In 3-D : NPR - 1 views

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    "Google has long offered anyone with an Internet connection a street-level view of cities and landmarks around the world, from the Golden Gate Bridge to the Roman Coliseum. Now, it's teaming up with a Brazilian environmental group to offer a 3-D, on-the-ground view of one of the planet's most remote areas: the hamlet of Tumbira in the center of the Brazilian Amazon. The goal is to show how people in the Amazon live - and educate the public about their effort to protect the forest."
Paul Wiech

Today's Meet - 1 views

shared by Paul Wiech on 29 Oct 11 - Cached
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    Live streaming conversation site.
Nancy Trautmann

What the Sparrows Told Me - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Reflections by a teacher on the resilience of birds in the face of Hurricane Katrina and how that relates to struggles in the lives of people here and around the globe
Nancy Trautmann

Young Voices for the Planet | Youth Solutions to the Global Warming Crisis - 0 views

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    "Young Voices for the Planet is a film series featuring young people who are making a difference! They are shrinking the carbon footprint of their homes, schools and communities. You, too, can do something about global warming! As Alec Loorz says, "Kids Have Power.""
Nancy Trautmann

Great Lakes Eco-Region: NOAA Education Resources - 0 views

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    Multimedia, lessons, data, and background information about the Great Lakes. Includes a "Listen to the Lake" podcast and several webcams. Lessons to download relate to watershed land use, fish life cycles, invasive species, human population, and others.
Nancy Trautmann

A picture of Earth through time - 0 views

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    "Global, zoomable time-lapse map... View stunning phenomena such as the sprouting of Dubai's artificial Palm Islands, the retreat of Alaska's Columbia Glacier, the deforestation of the Brazilian Amazon and urban growth in Las Vegas from 1984 to 2012 Using Google Earth Engine technology, we sifted through 2,068,467 images-a total of 909 terabytes of data-to find the highest-quality pixels (e.g., those without clouds), for every year since 1984 and for every spot on Earth. We then compiled these into enormous planetary images, 1.78 terapixels each, one for each year. As the final step, we worked with the CREATE Lab at Carnegie Mellon University, recipients of a Google Focused Research Award, to convert these annual Earth images into a seamless, browsable HTML5 animation. Check it out on Google's Timelapse website."
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