Sep 25, 2009

Volvo Adventure

The Adventure begins again

The winners of the Volvo Adventure, the world wide search undertaken with UNEP to find the most innovative, imaginative and practical  projects devised by young people to solve environmental problems, has been announced. This year the first prize has gone to the HUNAB team from the Yucatan coast of Mexico for their imaginative solution to local water problems. Using only 900 litres of water, each young person has taken responsibility for a small aquaculture pond, providing a sustainable harvest and a nursery for repopulating the local waterways once they have been cleaned.  This ingenious project has allowed the children to earn extra money to support their ongoing schooling and helped to spread the aquaculture ponds to other young people and improve their environment. Second place went to the visionary ‘tricycle’ project from the Queen Elizabeth II High School on the Isle of Man, combining initiatives such as planting a tree nursery at school, building a bike shed from disused plastic bottles and encouraging ‘Cycle Buses,’ to combat the environmentally unfriendly ‘school run.’ In third place, was the Govt. High School Tilak Nagar Gudhiyari in Raipur, India, the capital of the newly formed State of Chhattisgarh, their ‘Water Drop, a Precious Pearl’ project successfully reduced the wastage and created a more efficient use of the town’s precious public water supply.
This year’s final was fantastic, with all the finalists showing the impact that projects can have when they have sufficient time to develop – this is illustrated by the fact that the top two projects had been entering for a couple of years before winning. So we have decided to give projects more time to develop based upon this feedback from groups building to a bigger and better Volvo Adventure in 2011, the 10th birthday party for the Volvo Adventure. The benefits:
n        Groups have more time to plan develop their project and gather evidence of its impacts.
n        A set of free education materials and activities to help groups develop their project ideas.
If you working with young people between 13 and 16 years old who are actively involved in devising and managing the project, then you can enter. All you have to do is register and enter your project by visiting www.volvoadventure.org. By registering, you have the opportunity to win an all-expenses-paid trip to the final in Sweden and the chance of a financial reward that could make it possible to run, improve or enhance your project. For young people it could be an adventure that offers a chance to make new friends all over the world and attract international recognition for their project.

Start on the website

All you need to do to get started is to go to the Volvo Adventure website – www.volvoadventure.org. There you will find everything you need to register your project. You will receive a start-up package with instructions on how to proceed. We look forward to seeing your network’s projects! Good luck and remember – it could be your project in the 10th birthday final!

Interesting free stuff

Free Audubon Posters  
Free downloadable PDF posters are available online.
Healthy Yard: http://www.audubonathome.org/yard
Healthy Apartment: http://www.audubonathome.org/apartment/index.html
Healthy Country Home: http://www.audubonathome.org/countryhome/index.html
Healthy Schoolyard: http://www.audubonathome.org/schoolyard/index.html
Healthy Neighborhood: http://www.audubonathome.org/neighborhood/index.html

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Journey South
Give your students hands-on experience with nature by participating in Journey South, the fall portion of Annenberg Media’s Journey North program for K-12 students and teachers.  The international program puts students in touch with students in other countries as together they track wildlife migrations and seasonal growth and change. http://www.learner.org/jnorth/
 
 Freshwater and Marine Image Bank
The University of Washington Libraries offers 21,000 digitized images of freshwater and marine life taken from 1735-1924 from various publications.  Visitors can browse by collection and subject, or enter search criteria.   There are also links to other sources for digital images.  
http://content.lib.washington.edu/fishweb/index.html

 EarthTrends- is an online database maintained by the World Resources Institute that focuses on environmental, social, and economic trends.  Research topics include Coastal and Marine Ecosystems, Climate and Atmosphere, and more.  The website includes maps, information guides, a monthly newsletter, and other resources.  
http://earthtrends.wri.org/# 

Sep 17, 2009

Ookpik site for Northern/Arctic youth

The International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) announces the re-launching of the Ookpik website at: http://www.ookpik.org

Ookpik (the name comes from the Inuktitut word for snow owl) is intended to be a community website for circumpolar youth. Over the past two years, Ookpik has been managed by a series of young northerners and this practice will continue. It is designed for circumpolar youth with contributions from circumpolar youth, and includes information on arctic networks, knowledge, opinions, and events.

On the Ookpik website, arctic youth can:
- Create their own profiles and look at the profiles of others;
- Read about current affairs and other issues that happen in the Arctic;
- Learn about opportunities in the Arctic (e.g., internships, events, and education);
- Subscribe to the Arctic Future newsletter;
- Get connected and make friends with likeminded Northerners of their own age;
- Browse shared pictures from the Arctic and share their own;
- Blog about issues that concern them or share stories; and
- Start and contribute to discussion threads.

For more information, please go to:
http://www.ookpik.org.

Or email: ookpik@iisd.ca.

Sep 15, 2009

Time lapse of glaciers...way cool!

PLEASE check this out, it is fascinating. Use the full-screen option for best impact.


In addition to the Polar Palooza resources Louise mentioned, please take a look at the narrated videos showing time-lapse changes of glaciers in Alaska, Greenland and Iceland from the Extreme Ice Survey:

Many of you probably saw the NOVA PBS program last spring on the making of these time-lapse movies: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/extremeice/

More polar links


In addition to the Polar Palooza resources Louise mentioned, please take a look at the narrated videos showing time-lapse changes of glaciers in Alaska, Greenland and Iceland from the Extreme Ice Survey:

Many of you probably saw the NOVA PBS program last spring on the making of these time-lapse movies: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/extremeice/

A Plethora of IPY, Arctic/Antarctic Links

This from Louise at ANDRILL

Dear ANDRILLians,
My friend, Geoff Haines-Stiles from Polar Palooza, sent me this great list of their fantastic videos and resources and has invited all of you to use them. If you haven't seen these, check them out!

A favorite is "Take Aim at Climate Change," a rap song and music video showing IPY research and why it matters, and providing practical suggestions for how all and any of us can take simple steps to reduce consumption and cut emissions of greenhouse gases.
 

The online resources include links to deeper background on 12 key concepts, and URLs for further study. Educators can use the reference material for independent study or review in class.

Enjoy!
Louise

1) Alaskan Native perspectives on climate change:
 
"Richard Glenn - At Home in Two Worlds."
Richard Glenn, a professional geologist as well as whaling captain, an enthusiast for traditional music as well as rock drummer, lives in Barrow, the northernmost community in the United States. There he works as VP of Lands for the $1.6 billion per year Arctic Slope Regional Corporation. In this video he takes us on a tour of Barrow, and points out what's changing and why it matters.
 
Orville Huntington - "It's a Changing Thing"
In Huslia, a small township of 300 Native Alaskans on the Koyukuk River, climate change is impacting the whole community. Tribal counselor and wildlife biologist Orville Huntington guides us out on the river, to fish, and into the woods to hunt moose. On the river, he's seeing diseases that he thinks are caused by abnormally warm waters. In the forest, the trees and plants are also changing - some blooming in Fall instead of Spring. That makes Orville wonder about the future of his family and his region.
 
“Alaskan Native views of Climate Change”
This short two-minute video features Perry Pungowiyi from the Native Village of Savoonga on St. Lawrence Island, Alaska. It's his second time on board the HEALY where he was invited by Chief Scientist, Jackie Grebmeier, to observe and participate in some of the research that was being done during the cruise, including the NOAA/National Marine Mammal Laboratory study of Arctic ice seals and observations of spectacled eiders. He wants viewers to appreciate that he is speaking here as an individual, and that his comments should not be taken as the views and opinions of the people of St. Lawrence Island.
 
~~~

2) Arctic research:
 
“George Divoky: The Bird-Watcher Who Saw the Future”
For nearly 35 years George Divoky has been returning to Cooper Island, a small, low strip of desolate land close to Barrow, AK. Initially he went there simply to study Black Guillemots, but as - over the decades - he tracked the dates of their arrival and the new chicks hatching, he realized he was documenting how climate change was affecting both an organism and an ecosystem. As summer ice retreated, food for the chicks was harder and harder to find - and polar bears began to roam the beach.
 
POLAR-PALOOZA produced this segment for the PBS Lehrer Newshour showing NYU oceanographer David Holland working on the Jakobshavn Glacier and ice fjord, Greenland's most active glacier. Also has comments by fishermen and others in Ilulissat about climate and social changes.
 
"Reading Ice Cores"
In May and June 2007, Mary Albert (CRREL) and Jeff Severinghaus (Scripps) led a team of 9 researchers and 3 drillers in a 3-week project to drill down through nearly 125 meters of "firn" and ice close to NSF's Summit Station, Greenland. "Firn" is multi-year snow before it's transformed into solid ice through the pressure of layer upon layer of new snow each successive year. Understanding the physical structure of the firn and the gases trapped in it, is essential to properly interpreting the ice core record, and understanding what cores reveal about Earth's past climate. As Jeff Severinghaus says, with a more accurate understanding of snow, firn and ice you can take climate data from ice cores "to the bank" - such as the fact that sometimes Earth's climate can jump 18 degrees F in just a decade - and make more accurate predictions of the future.
 
“Ice Drillers are Hard Core"
Deciphering the secrets of past climate hidden in ice cores depends on the technical skills and ingenuity under pressure of drillers from ICDS, the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Ice Coring and Drilling Services. In this video, ICDS staffers Lou, Mike and Jay explain why they enjoy the life of drillers, braving extreme cold in some of the remotest regions of the globe. Mike says drilling requires both science and art, and why he keeps his hand on the cable even when it's minus 20; Lou talks about feeling connected to the equipment in order to keep it running properly, and Jay explains the satisfaction of having fun amidst beautiful scenery, and helping obtain good data for the researchers.
 
“Justin and Bonnie - Undergrads at Work”
As seen in "Captain Jack and the Halogen Hunters" (see other links in MEDIA PALOOZA), Summit Station, Greenland is a hothouse of climate change research in one of the coldest places on Earth. Here professors like Jack Dibb run sophisticated experiments, but as you'll see in this video, some of the work relies on undergraduates like Justin Juhan from Southern Polytechnic, and Bonnie Reichardt, Georgia Tech. As you'll also see, as well as working the night shift, they have time for fun - sumo wrestling as well as science.
 
“APLIS Ice Camp - Science”
Scenes from the very first US IPY experiment, studying the dynamics of sea ice off Prudhoe Bay, Alaska. This "Sedna" experiment was co-lead by three female Principal Investigators, another first.
 
“Climate-driven Change in the Northern Bering Sea”
Chief scientist Jackie Grebmeier's May-June 2007 cruise aboard the USCGC HEALY looked at climate change and its impact on the local marine ecosystem, from the smallest creatures to those farther up the food chain. Also on board, and leading off our report, Perry Pungowiyi, a Siberian Yupik who's been noticing changes in the abundance of sea-ice, and the timing of its appearance and disappearance. See a seal census, with white-clad NOAA researchers (for camouflage) jumping from ice floe to ice floe. Hear from the researchers how a changing environment impacts all the inhabitants of the narrow ocean that stretches between Alaska and Siberia, till now one of the most productive seas in the world, and a major fishery on which the USA depends. Meet the inhabitants of this aquatic "neighborhood", as Jackie describes it, and learn what makes it tick... and change.

~~~
 
Antarctic Research:
 
“Studying Seals”
Bob Garrott and his team of students and assistants from Montana State return each year to one of the most amazing locations on Earth, where sea-ice bumps up against the land, opening up cracks that become nurseries for each new generation of Weddell seals. A close-up look at the first few months of a pup that may gain 200 pounds in just a few weeks. Venture out with the researchers as they carefully weigh and photograph the seals.
 
This 4-part podcast mini-series documents the harsh reality of doing science in Antarctica, where nothing goes as planned, and ingenuity, patience and dedication are always required.
 
In part 1, "The Road Less Traveled", NASA's Bob Bindschadler and NYU's David Holland set off for Antarctica and explain their mission. Then, accompanied by a mountaineer and POLAR-PALOOZA's embedded cameraman, they head off to the WAIS Divide Camp, jumping off point for their trip to the PIG, the Pine Island Glacier.
 
Part 4, "Antarctica Is In Charge". Reunited after challenges imposed by crevasses and bad weather, the full team deploys two GPS units which they hope will document the rapid movement of the PIG. Holland and Bindshadler explain the significance of their work, their recognition that weather and logistics dictate what any researcher can achieve here, and yet express their satisfaction at visiting places no human ever has before, and surmounting challenges in order to have a good shot at getting data needed for humans to figure out the future.
 
“The Traverse Begins” - #3 of a 6-part mini-series on the Norwegian-US Scientific Traverse of East Antarctica. (#1 and #2 show the flight from South Africa to Antarctica, and final tests at Norway’s Troll Station.)
 
After three weeks of hectic preparation, including placing brand new Norwegian and US flags - and decals for NSF and the Norwegian Polar Institute (NPI) - on the tracked vehicles, the traverse rolls out on November 16, 2007, heading for South Pole, more than 3,000 kms away. NPI's Jan-Gunnar Winther thinks a successful traverse will be a historic milestone in both exploration and cutting-edge science. The train of heavily-laden sleds passes spectacular mountain scenery as it climbs away from Troll Station up to the flat, white polar plateau. At their first science stop, researchers Mary Albert, Tom Neumann and Lou Albershardt dig a snow pit, and explain why they are sampling seasonal layers and photographing ice crystals - in part to gather "ground truth" to calibrate NASA's satellite observations of the vast and little known East Antarctic.
 
“Vctory Awaits” – finale of the US-Norwegian Traverse as the team eventually arrives at South Pole Station, with more ice core than initially planned. But they fly in by plane, since after failures in their gear boxes, they have had to leave their vehicles more than 250 kms from the Pole. Thoughts from “Camp Winter” and the completion of their amazing scientific adventure.
 
“Students on Board” and “Core Curriculum” – parts 1 & 2 of the “From Louisiana to Antarctica” mini-series. Set sail with LSU geology professor Phil Bart and a team of students - both undergrads and graduates - on board the NATHANIEL B. PALMER. See what they saw as they left McMurdo Station, and set off for the Ross Sea, to study evidence left by ancient ice sheets which may help predict the rate and extent of future sea level rise. Philip Bergeron, one of the undergrads, reads a page from his journey detailing their scientific adventure.
 
Then, in temperatures far below zero, with ice needing to be chipped off their instruments, the team set to work. Bart and Co-PI, Jonathan Tomkins, describe their research - and the students tell of what feels like "the worst game of tug-of-war, evah..." as they man- (and woman-) handle the muddy core tubes to get at their precious samples. Not everything goes exactly as planned. The jumbo piston core comes up bent, but they recover and get good data.
 
ANSMET – The Antarctic Search for Meteorites
Out on the "blue ice" in some of the most extreme conditions on the entire Continent, a small team of hardy researchers search for chunks of the Moon, Mars and asteroid belt, fallen to Earth as meteorites. Go behind the scenes and see, in intimate detail, how they keep warm, what they eat and wear, and how they find rocks from outer space - and hear from team leader, Ralph Harvey, why they risk life and limb in ANSMET, the Antarctic Search for Meteorites, an ongoing project supported by both NSF and NASA.
 
Join John Priscu and team as - for the first time ever - American researchers stay out in the field for an extended research season in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, as the Antarctic summer of 24/7 days begins to turn into 24/7 night. John and colleagues explain why these valleys and their microbial ecosystem are so unique, and why it's worth the risk and discomfort to stay on so late, sampling lakes in temperatures more than 40 degrees below. This video shows some of the amazing Dry Valley landscapes in rare low-light conditions.
 
 
Also – a handy digest of Polar Misperceptions, which could be used as a kind of quiz or discussion starter:
 
Educators’ Corner provides links (see the drop-down menu) to NASA and others science animations which can be downloaded, and simple, low-cost hands-on activities developed by POLAR-PALOOZA and others.
http://passporttoknowledge.com/polar-palooza/pp09.php

--
ANDRILL Coordinator of Education and Public Outreach
630-460-3688

ANDRILL Science Management Office
126 Bessey Hall
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Lincoln, NE  68588-0341
402-472-6723

Sep 3, 2009

PlantWatch Teachers Guide

The PlantWatch Teacher's Guide is now available to download at: www.plantwatch.ca by clicking on "Educator Resources."

Curriculum links have been identified for every province and territory across Canada for grades six to eight. The Guide is divided into "Key Activity" sections detailing how to PlantWatch, and "Connections" which describe a range of math, science and social science activities that can be done in conjunction with PlantWatch to promote an interdisciplinary approach to learning.

The PlantWatch program enables "citizen scientists" to get involved by recording flowering times for selected plant species and reporting these dates to researchers through the Internet or by mail. When you submit your data electronically, it's added instantly to Web maps showing bloom dates across Canada, so your observations make a difference right away!

A joint venture between the Nature Canada and Environment Canada, our goal is to encourage Canadians of all ages to get involved in helping scientists discover how, and more importantly why, our natural environment is changing.