Finding Slope Activity Source: Soil Science Society of America. H.M. Galloway, A.L. Zachery, Agronomy Department, Purdue University,
Revised by S.S. Fulk-Bringman. Adapted with permission.
Earth scientists play an important, if largely invisible, role in many aspects of our daily lives, such as building homes or growing food. For example, geoscientists help determine which locations would be best for undertaking these vital activities.
The slope of the soil is an important soil property to consider when building or planting.
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Flood!
Flood! Activity Source: DiscoverySchool.com
Credit: Susan Hurstcalderone, science and resource teacher, Blessed Sacrament School, Washington, D.C.
Length of Lesson: Two class periods
Objectives: Students will understand the following:
Different types of soil have different capacities for retaining rainwater. If the soil in an area will not hold enough rainwater, flooding problems will ensue. Soil can be tested for its water-retaining capacity. Materials: The following materials should be distributed to each group:
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Food Source
Food Source Activity Source: Association of American Geographers. Adapted with permission.
How diverse are the food sources in your community and where are they located? How far do they travel to reach you? Do you think the food sources for your community are sustainable? This multi-day activity explores these questions.
As of 2008, more than 50 percent of the world’s population lives in cities for the first time in the history of the planet.
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Freddy the Fish
Freddy the Fish Activity Source: Gammar, Debbie (1997) Environmental Teaching Guide Vol. 2. TNRCC. pg. 35-36.
Procedures Exploration In a whole group have the students complete a brainstorm activity on all the information they can recall about river habitats and water pollution.
Information Human activities can have a detrimental effect on animal habitats. People need to be more aware of their actions and the consequences of those actions.
Materials one-gallon glass jar sponge cut in shape of a fish fishing line tied to a pencil at one end and Freddy at the other (Freddy should hang in the middle of the jar) small amounts of the following: soil, pancake syrup, salt, paper dots, brown sugar, soapy water, red and green food coloring Copy of Freddy the Fish on note cards.
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Geography of a Pencil
Geography of a Pencil Activity Source: National Geographic. Adapted with permission.
How is the world connected to the pencil you hold in your hand? Complete this activity to find out.
For the teacher:
Before starting the activity, visit natgeoed.org/mapmaker- kit online. In the Mapping section, click “MapMaker Kits.” Assemble the World Political MapMaker Kit Mega Map for large- group instruction, or the tabletop map for work in smaller groups. Watch the assembly video included on the MapMaker Kit web page for more instructions on assembly.
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Geoscience and Petroleum Careers
Geoscience and Petroleum Careers Activity Source: SEED (SLB Excellence in Educational Development). Adapted with permission.
What adventures await you as a student of the Earth sciences? How about a career as a scientist or engineer working for the world’s largest oilfield services company? SLB employees invent, design, engineer, and apply technologies to help customers find and produce oil and gas more efficiently and safely — often in remote and challenging locations.
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Getting the Oil Out
Getting the Oil Out Activity Source: Society of Petroleum Engineers. Adapted with permission.
Artificial lifting systems, or pumping units, are used to help pull oil out of reservoir rock and pump it up a well. A down hole pump in the well is connected to the pumping unit by steel rods, which are screwed together.
The pump is activated from the up and down movement of the pumping unit on the surface.
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Gold Panning
Gold Panning Activity Source: Adapted with permission by Adrienne Barnett, Chabot Space & Science Center, Oakland, California.
“Thar’s gold in them thar classrooms!” History meets Earth science in the fun, hands-on activity below.
Some gold deposits, or lodes, are found in veins of fractured rock. After millions of years of weathering, gold nuggets and flakes are eroded out of the veins and carried away by streams and rivers. Gold is 19 times heavier than water and tends to settle on the bottom and in the bends of rivers, streams, and lakes with sand and gravel, forming deposits called placer.
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Greenhouse in a Beaker
Greenhouse in a Beaker Activity Source: Adapted with permission by The NEED Project.
Carbon is naturally found in the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide, or CO2, itself is not considered a pollutant. The CO2 being released from burning fossil fuels was part of the atmosphere hundreds of millions of years ago before being captured by plants and sea organisms.
Carbon atoms naturally cycle through the biosphere, the atmosphere, the hydrosphere, and the lithosphere in process known as the carbon cycle.
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How Dangerous Are Tsunamis?
How Dangerous Are Tsunamis? Activity Source: Adapted with permission by Geological Society of America. Imagine playing beside the ocean, when suddenly, the water drops. Where the water used to be, there are wriggling fish and ribbons of seaweed. What do you do?
You could be seeing the first sign of a tsunami ─ a long wave formed in the ocean when the sea floor moves suddenly. Most tsunamis happen because of large earthquakes on the ocean floor.
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