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  1. Resources

Displaying 1 - 10 of 15

A Day in the Field: Collecting Ice Cores

Overview

Students will engage in a virtual field experience on Huascarán Mountain in Peru, learning about how ice cores are collected and stored.

Lesson Preparation

Refer to Lesson Materials

* Copies of Worksheets
* Computers for students

Procedure


1. Read National Geographic Encyclopedia Entry Paleoclimatology and answer questions
2. Watch video Recovering Ice Cores (link in Resources).
3. Complete virtual

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic Antarctic
About 1 period
High school and Up
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Investigating the Effect of Increasing Carbon-Dioxide Concentrations on Sea Animals

Overview

Students will understand how the increasing levels of carbon-dioxide in oceans affect shelled marine animals. They will carry out a student-developed investigation on how increasing ocean acidification affects these animals.

Objectives

The objective of this lesson is for students to assess how increasing levels of atmospheric CO2 affect marine organisms. In addition, they will devise an experiment to test

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
High school and Up
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Investigations Beneath the Surface—Studying Underwater Life

Technology geared to the instruction and learning of science concepts, skills, and processes is instrumental to a deeper understanding of science phenomena and content.

Overview

This lesson is intended to introduce students to the concept of scientific exploration and investigation. Students will model the technology used in the Jellyfish in the Bering Sea expedition by using underwater cameras and tow

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
More than a week
High school and Up
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Remote Sensing in Polar Regions and Beyond

NASA’s Operation IceBridge uses remote sensing techniques to build a picture of parts of our world not accessible or easily observed by humans. Flying 1500 feet above sea and land ice, the science team uses LiDAR, Radar, Infrared imaging, and high resolution digital imagery to collect information about our polar regions year after year. In this classroom project, inspired and

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
More than a week
Middle School and Up
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Resiliency and Change for Arctic Peoples

This presentation, given by Robert Suydam, at the 2012 Arctic Ocean Ecosystem Workshop in Barrow, Alaska, is an overview of the resilience of the people of the North Slope with respect to their whaling history. The presentation showcases the history of both the science and traditional knowledge used in attempting to track whale population health and the ways in which

Resource Details
Presentation
Arctic
Middle School and Up
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Cultural Resilience Depends on the Young: Students and Time Depth

Senior Scientist Anne Jensen gave a presentation about cultural resilience and sustainability at the 2012 Arctic Ocean Ecosystem Workshop in Barrow, Alaska. Read more about her archaeological work here.

Resource Details
Presentation
Arctic
Middle School and Up
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Wow A Biface!

Share in the excitement of unearthing a biface and other archaeological treasures, as Alaskan researchers explain how they discover and document early human settlement sites across arctic Alaska. This video is part of a larger story on the Frontier Scientists website (http://frontierscientists.com/), the University of Alaska Fairbanks' portal for sharing the Arctic's newest discoveries.

Resource Details
Web Link
Arctic
All Aged
View Resource

Time Travel in the Alaskan Arctic

Travel back in time as scientists and PolarTREC teacher Karl Horeis take you out to their dig sites to uncover hidden clues about early human settlement in arctic Alaska. This video is part of a larger story on the Frontier Scientists website (http://frontierscientists.com/), the University of Alaska Fairbanks' portal for sharing the Arctic's newest discoveries.

Resource Details
Web Link
Arctic
All Aged
View Resource

Twice the TREC: Learning by Doing

Article describing PolarTREC teacher Susy Ellison's recent expeditions to Alaska to take part in a tree ring study in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and an archaeological expedition in Kivalina.

Resource Details
Article
Arctic
All Aged
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PolarTREC Posters

In this lesson students research scientific field expeditions and learn what it is like working in the field. Students are able to ask questions of the research team as part of their project. Students then share what they have learned with their classmates.

Objective


1. Students understand what really goes on in the field during a scientific study.

2

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
About a week
Middle School and Up
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Search Resources

Resource Type

  • Lesson (6)
  • Article (3)
  • Web Link (3)
  • Presentation (2)
  • Activity (1)

Region

  • Antarctic (5)
  • (-) Arctic (15)

Grade

  • All Aged (6)
  • Middle School and Up (5)
  • High school and Up (3)
  • Elementary and Up (1)

Related Members

  • Frank Kelley (3)
  • Katie Breen (3)
  • Lenore Teevan (2)
  • Misty Nikula (2)
  • Bridget Ward (1)
  • Janet Warburton (1)
  • Kelly McCarthy (1)
  • Robert Harris (1)
  • Sarah Bartholow (1)

Expeditions

  • Nuvuk Archaeology Studies (4)
  • Early Human Settlement in Arctic Alaska (2)
  • Jellyfish in the Bering Sea (2)
  • Forest Response to Arctic Environmental Change (1)
  • Kuril Islands Biocomplexity (1)
  • Operation IceBridge Arctic (1)
  • SEDNA Beaufort Sea Ice (1)
  • Weddell Seals: Growing Up on Ice (1)

Completion Time

  • About 1 period (2)
  • More than a week (2)
  • About a week (1)
  • Less than a week (1)
  • n/a (1)

Topic

  • Polar Science (282)
  • Earth Science (281)
  • Life Science (259)
  • Environmental Studies (144)
  • Physical Science (120)
  • Polar Careers (100)
  • Archaeology and Anthropology (81)
    • Climate Change (40)
    • Subsistence (20)
    • General Archaeology and Anthropology (19)
    • Language & Communication (9)
    • Human Evolution (6)
    • History of Archeology or Anthropology (1)
    • (-) Tools and Methods (15)
  • Engineering (47)

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Arctic Research Consortium of the U.S.

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This site is supported by the National Science Foundation under award 1918637.

Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this site are those of the PIs and coordinating team and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

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