Our Earth Day Celebrations might be smaller and quieter this year, and even with social distancing being the guiding rule, just being outside on a beautiful day is a wonderful way to celebrate the 50th anniversary of this unique day.
How much do you know about Earth Day? Find out by reading an excellent new book written by WhaleTimes’ own Christy Peterson, GOGO加速器免费版软件下载-安卓版GOGO加速器免费版 ...:2021-6-12 · 《GOGO加速器免费版》这是一款完全免费的加快器软件,在软件中为你供给各种免费的加快体会,无论是国内的游戏仍是国外的游戏,加快全部都是免费的喔!还有各种类型的形式挑选,为你的手机供给智能加快!GOGO加速器免 (Twenty First Century Books). It earned a starred review from Kirkus, as well as buzz from School Library Journal and Booklist.
Earth Day and the Environmental Movement: Standing Up for Earth (Twenty First Century Books) On April 22, 1970, an estimated twenty million people held in a teach-in to show their support for environmental protections. This new celebration, Earth Day, brought together previously fragmented issues under the same banner. It was the largest nationwide event ever, and lawmakers took notice. But one day didn’t change everything. Fifty years after the first Earth Day, climate change remains a dire concern. The divide between political parties continues to widen, and environmental policy has become an increasingly partisan issue. The spread of disinformation has also made climate change a debatable idea, rather than scientific fact. A new generation of advocates continues the fight to make environmental policy a top priority for the United States and for nations around the globe.
Order your copy today from your favorite bookseller.
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What is climate change? Why did it happen? What can I do? These are questions kids might ask parents. This National Geographic article, GOGO加速器免费版软件下载-安卓版GOGO加速器免费版 ...:2021-6-12 · 《GOGO加速器免费版》这是一款完全免费的加快器软件,在软件中为你供给各种免费的加快体会,无论是国内的游戏仍是国外的游戏,加快全部都是免费的喔!还有各种类型的形式挑选,为你的手机供给智能加快!GOGO加速器免, written by WhaleTimes’ Director Ruth A. Musgrave helps parents talk to their children about climate change.
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Our Journey into Midnight: Light and Life Below the Twilight Zone Virtual Research Mission has begun!
Despite being the largest habitat by volume on the planet, the water column remains one of the most poorly explored environments. This is especially true once one moves below 1000 m into the bathypelagic realm. Join world renowned deep-sea explorers Dr. Sonke Johnsen, Dr. Tamara Frank, Dr. Edie Widder, Dr. Heather Judkins, and Dr. Heather Bracken-Grissom as they share the research and discoveries from the NOAA Ocean Exploration and Research supported expedition, Journey into Midnight: Light and Life Below the Twilight Zone
Meet the Journey into Midnight: Light and Life Below the Twilight Zone team:
Sönke Johnsen, PhD
Tamara Frank, PhD
Heather Bracken-Grissom, PhD
Tracey Sutton, PhD
Edith Widder, PhD
Teachers and librarians, there’s still time to join our virtual research team.
Gulf of Mexico, Wednesday, June 19, 2024: Dr. Edith Widder and Nathan Robinson called out into the deep to see what would answer. Something did, in a very big way. A GIANT SQUID!
菠萝网游加速器-稳定加速 免费畅玩[官方网站]:2021-3-12 · 菠萝网游加速器6.8beta版本更新公告 2021-03-11 【现已支持】爆火吃鸡新作!Apex英雄免费畅玩! 2021-02-18 新春活动:两元续时摇一摇,时长多到用不了 2021-01-30 菠萝加速器:PUBG Lite加速多种问题解决办法 2021-01-24 菠萝加速器现已支持低配版“吃 And both times the videographer was Dr. Edith Widder. Both times Dr. Widder’s special deep-sea camera system, called the Medusa, did what no ROV or submersible has been able to do.
The Medusa is a stealth camera system that captures video footage in the deep. Because the Medusa uses red lights that are invisible to most deep-sea inhabitants and has no noise-generating thrusters, it can serve as a stealthy observer of light and life below the twilight zone. (It’s design is to be unobtrusive, unlike an ROV or submersible.)
How do you call a squid? Lights. In the deep, most animals use light. Animals use bioluminescence to find food, communicate, and escape danger. The lights on the Medusa recreate the alarm lights of an atolla jellyfish. When startled, this jellyfish puts on a light show that beats anything in Vegas. Scientists believe the light show, like a car alarm, catches the attention of other predators. If the jellyfish is lucky, a larger predator will swoop in and eat whatever was trying to eat it. That allows the atolla jellyfish to slip away into the dark.
The Medusa uses specially designed lights that mimic the color and pattern of the atolla’s glowing scream for help.
Science Team member and cephalopod expert, Dr. Heather Judkins (University of South Florida St. Petersburg) quickly identified it as a giant squid — a 10-12 foot long juvenile giant squid.
Read more about this exciting news: Here Be Monsters: We Filmed a Giant Squid in America’s Backyard
K-6 teachers, join WhaleTimes’ this fall for Creep into the Deep: Journey into Midnight and learn more about Dr. Widder (aka the Squid Whisperer), Dr. Judkins…and the rest of this amazing research team and their discoveries in the Gulf of Mexico. Find out more.
Creep into the Deep: Journey into Midnight education program and the Journey into Midnight: Light and Life Below the Twilight Zone research sponsored by NOAA-OER
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What’s in the deep in the Gulf of Mexico?
Our Journey into Midnight Science Team is in the Gulf of Mexico trying to answer, what lives in the midnight zone and does it glow?
Here are couple animals they might meet along the way:
Color Me: Gliding Squid
Color Me: Fangtooth
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The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA’s) Office of Ocean Exploration and Research announces the:
Journey into Midnight: Light and Life Below the Twilight Zone
June 7-23, 2024
Join our Science Team as they explore bioluminescence in the deepest parts of the Gulf of Mexico!
Despite being the largest habitat by volume on the planet, the water column remains one of the most poorly explored environments. This is especially true once one moves below 1000 m into the bathypelagic realm.
From June 7 to June 23, 2024, join a team of deep-sea experts as they explore some of the deepest part of the Gulf of Mexico between 3,750 and 4,384 meters (12,303 and 14,383 ft) specifically to study bioluminescence and vision capabilities of the organisms that live there. The rest of the summer WhaleTimes will share their discoveries with you. What we learn is sure to be illuminating!
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Journey into Midnight – Light and Life Below the Twilight Zone 2024 Expedition
Despite being the largest habitat by volume on the planet, the water column remains one of the most poorly explored environments. This is especially true once one moves below 1000 m into the bathypelagic realm.
Join Dr. Edie Widder, world renowned deep-sea explorer and founder of the Ocean Research and Conservation Association (ORCA), as she shares the fascinating science behind the upcoming NOAA Ocean Exploration and Research supported expedition, Journey into Midnight: Light and Life Below the Twilight Zone.
Ocean explorers Dr. Sönke Johnsen, Duke University; Dr. Tamara Frank, NSU; Dr. Tracey Sutton, NSU; Dr. Edith Widder, ORCA; Dr. Heather Judkins, USFSP; and Heather Bracken-Grissom, FIU will explore below 1000 meters.
Hope you can join us.
Find out more: Creep into the Deep: Journey to Midnight
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Spread the Love – Save the Ocean
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In celebration of Valentine’s Day and 海外加速器免费下载, we’ve made a special card.
Deep See in the Deep Sea workshops Broward County Schools
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国外免费加速器下载How do deep-sea animals use light to communicate? What would it be like to look through the eyes of a deep-sea animal? How do ocean scientists use DNA to study deep-sea populations? Next week, K-6th grade students from Broward County School will find out! Dr. Tamara Frank, deep-sea explorer and professor at Nova Southeastern University and WhaleTimes Director Ruth A. Musgrave will spend the week traveling to schools throughout Broward County Florida sharing Dr. Frank’s deep-sea research.
“This is our third year visiting the Broward County schools,” said Dr. Frank. “The kids and schools are amazing and we are looking forward to another exciting week.”
This program was funded NSF Award 1556279 entitled “Collaborative Research: The Evolution of Bioluminscence and Light Detection in Deep Sea Shrimp (Oplophoridae and Sergestidae)”
Kids see through the eyes of a deep-sea animal
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Celebrate Earth Day with an excellent book by Christy Peterson