Wednesday, May 28, 2008

In class response for Artic Tale




Artic Tale, a very inspirational and information tape was veiwed today in class. As the movie started the importance was unclear to me , but as the video proceded I realized many things.Polar bears and Walrusses were a big focus along with theri needs for their survival and their surroundings, which was in the Artic. The Artic is a very cold area where its mainly snow and ice also winds blow fiercly, making the degrees drop to far below zero.BRRR! There were many shocking details about both types of animals that introduced throughout the tape. One being that Walrusses canot stay in water for long periods of tiem or else they will die, due to the temperature of teh water. In addition I learned that Mother polar bears abondon their children a two years of age becuase the child is thougtht to be an adult at that time! Life was definatley not easy for either type of mammal. They are a little like us humans,where the adults make sacrifices for the young, inorder to keep them away from danger! This movie was touching and left me with important information!

-http://www.impawards.com/2007/posters/arctic_tale.jpg

-http://www.saskschools.ca/~gregory/arctic/Aintro.html


^^ Above are two url's that will help you to understand teh paragraph above and
to get a sense of what life is like for animals and wild life in the Artic.In addition i reccomend you watch the movie ! (:

Kite Fun [ In class response ]

Today in Science class we went outside to fly our hand-mad kites.As soon as I got outside i could feel the heat and there was no breeze. The lack of local winds and a sea breeze, made it hard for the diamond-shaped kites, to even begin to fly. However, us students still pranced around trying to catch any bit of wind that we could. The reason my kite didnt fly was becuase there was no wind. In addition if my kite had been able to fly it would ahve been due to Local winds which are short distance winds. From this experience I learned s lot. Such as why kits fly, What local and global winds are. Also that the coriolis effect has a big impact on weither or not your kite will be able to fly. With this in mind, i also learned taht kites fly better in the summer.

-http://www.windpower.org/en/tour/wres/localwin.htm

-http://www.windpower.org/en/tour/wres/coriolis.htm

The two URL's above provide additional information about local winds,Sea Breeze,Land breeze and the Coriolis Effect. The websites can help you to better understand why my kite didnt end up flying. Also maybe why a kite does fly. In addition, They further explain each vocabulary word higlighted in the paragraph above.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Social Studies [ YELLOW]

In my opinion the greatest change from 30 years ago until today is the computer. The computer in general is amazing, the type of things and information it can do and store. The internet, one of the computers best features has changed my life. Everyday of my life i go and use teh internet. I use it for homework, to find phone numbers of stores. Also to shop online. I can imagine not haveing my own! It blows my mind that 3v3n just 30 years ago computers werent thought of and only schools had them handy! Ultimately the creation of teh computer along with its internet and other featurs has had teh most significant impact on my life and simply makes life easier!

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

In class responce 08'

SODA CAN LAB!


In science class, during the green period we did a series of experiments using Charles and Boyles laws. We popped pop corn ,used a bunsun burner to blow up a balloon. In addition another bunsun burner along with water was used to crush a soda can! Personally my favorite station was the the soda can station. At this station Charles laws applied. I knew this becuase as soon as the heated can was puit into ice cold water it crushed. The first thing we did was place a little bit of water into the can. Second we placed the can ontop of the bunsun burner and waited until we saw steam rising. As soon as the steam was visible you had to put on safety gloves.Then the can was grabbed quickly and turned facedown into the water. It soon made a loud noise and it callapsed. This action happened due to the rapid change in temperature. In addition it happened in the blink-of-an-eye.

http://web.mst.edu/~gbert/gaslaw/AAgas.html
http://mooni.fccj.org/~ethall/gaslaw/gaslaw.htm

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

2nd blog-08 Current Events

Starfish outbreak threatens corals

-- January 15, 2008 -



Outbreaks of the notorious crown of thorns starfish now threaten the "coral triangle," the richest center of coral reef biodiversity on Earth, according to recent surveys by the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation Society and ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies.The starfish - a predator that feeds on corals by spreading its stomach over them and using digestive enzymes to liquefy tissue - were discovered in large numbers by the researchers in reefs in Halmahera, Indonesia, at the heart of the Coral Triangle, which lies between Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. It is considered the genetic fountainhead for coral diversity found on Australia's Great Barrier Reef, Ningaloo and other reefs in the region.Scientists fear the outbreak is caused by poor water quality and could be an early warning of widespread reef decline.Recent surveys of Halmahera by the Wildlife Conservation Society and ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies confirmed that while Halmahera's reefs are still 30-50 percent richer than nearby reefs, some areas were almost completely destroyed."The main cause of damage to the corals was the Crown of Thorns Starfish," Dr. Andrew Baird of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and James Cook University. "We witnessed a number of active outbreaks of this coral predator. There was little to suggest that the reefs have been much affected by climate change as yet: the threats appear far more localized."The team also saw first-hand evidence of recent blast-fishing, an extremely destructive fishing practice that uses explosives. According to locals this accompanied a break down of law and order following communal violence in 2000-2003. During the same time many reef lagoons were mined of their corals for use in construction, an activity encouraged by the Indonesian military."This is clearly a complex human environment and effective management of the marine resources must address the needs of communities. It will also be vitally important to understand the causes of conflict among communities and address them," says Dr Stuart Campbell, Program Leader for the Wildlife Conservation Society's' Marine Program in Indonesia.The researchers pointed out that there were still healthy populations of certain species - and still time to reverse the damage."The good news is that the reef fish assemblages are still in very good shape" said Tasrif Kartawijaya from WCS-IP. "We saw Napoleon wrasse and bumphead parrot fish at almost every site. So these reefs have the capacity to recover if we can address the current threats."The Coral Triangle Initiative (CTI) announced by six regional governments at the Bali Climate Change Conference recently offers hope for the reefs in the region, the researchers say. However, there are few details of how it will work and no mention of the fundamental role of research in the conservation program."We are disappointed research is yet to be fully considered in the CTI. The success of large marine parks, like the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park, is largely due to the primary role of science plays in understanding what's going on, so managers can make good decisions," said Dr Baird."It isn't enough just to document the diversity of the region. Large scale research is required to understand the Coral Triangle ecosystems and work out how best to respond to threats such as poor water quality and overexploitation," Dr Campbell added.



-Wildlife Conservation Society



http://www.brightsurf.com/news/headlines/35307/Starfish_outbreak_threatens_corals.html



When: Today, Tuesday January 15th, 2008
What: It was discoverd that the outbreak of starfish are indangering the " coral triangle."
Who: Scientists at Wildlife Conservation Society along with Dr. Andrew Baird
Where:At the Wildlife Conservation society in Halmahera, Indonesia

After readingover this bit of information i was a bit surprised. I was surprised beacuse in class we had just leaned about starfisg and this wasnt an issue taht was brought up. With this in mind, I was interested in why/how this would occur. In addition its good to know that the reefs are still in good condition so far. I also never knew that there were starfish that go by the name of Thorn startfish.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Current Event-first Blog

Evolution tied to Earth movement

December 19, 2007 -



Scientists long have focused on how climate and vegetation allowed human ancestors to evolve in Africa. Now, University of Utah geologists are calling renewed attention to the idea that ground movements formed mountains and valleys, creating environments that favored the emergence of humanity."Tectonics [movement of Earth's crust] was ultimately responsible for the evolution of humankind," Royhan and Nahid Gani of the university's Energy and Geoscience Institute write in the January, 2008, issue of Geotimes, published by the American Geological Institute.They argue that the accelerated uplift of mountains and highlands stretching from Ethiopia to South Africa blocked much ocean moisture, converting lush tropical forests into an arid patchwork of woodlands and savannah grasslands that gradually favored human ancestors who came down from the trees and started walking on two feet - an energy-efficient way to search larger areas for food in an arid environment.In their Geotimes article, the Ganis - a husband-and-wife research team who met in college in their native Bangladesh - describe this 3,700-mile-long stretch of highlands and mountains as "the Wall of Africa." It parallels the famed East African Rift valley, where many fossils of human ancestors were found."Because of the crustal movement or tectonism in East Africa, the landscape drastically changed over the last 7 million years," says Royhan Gani (pronounced rye-hawn Go-knee), a research assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering. "That landscape controlled climate on a local to regional scale. That climate change spurred human ancestors to evolve from apes."Hominins - the new scientific word for humans (Homo) and their ancestors (including Ardipithecus, Paranthropus and Australopithecus) - split from apes on the evolutionary tree roughly 7 million to 4 million years ago. Royhan Gani says the earliest undisputed hominin was Ardipithecus ramidus 4.4 million years ago. The earliest Homo arose 2.5 million years ago, and our species, Homo sapiens, almost 200,000 years ago.Tectonics - movements of Earth's crust, including its ever-shifting tectonic plates and the creation of mountains, valleys and ocean basins - has been discussed since at least 1983 as an influence on human evolution.But Royhan Gani says much previous discussion of how climate affected human evolution involves global climate changes, such as those caused by cyclic changes in Earth's orbit around the sun, and not local and regional climate changes caused by East Africa's rising landscape.A Force from within the EarthThe geological or tectonic forces shaping Africa begin deep in the Earth, where a "superplume" of hot and molten rock has swelled upward for at least the past 45 million years. This superplume and its branching smaller plumes help push apart the African and Arabian tectonic plates of Earth's crust, forming the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden and the Great Rift Valley that stretches from Syria to southern Africa.As part of this process, Africa is being split apart along the East African Rift, a valley bounded by elevated "shoulders" a few tens of miles wide and sitting atop "domes" a few hundreds of miles wide and caused by upward bulging of the plume.The East African Rift runs about 3,700 miles from the Ethiopian Plateau south-southwest to South Africa's Karoo Plateau. It is up to 370 miles wide and includes mountains reaching a maximum elevation of about 19,340 feet at Mount Kilimanjaro.The rift "is characterized by volcanic peaks, plateaus, valleys and large basins and freshwater lakes," including sites where many fossils of early humans and their ancestors have been found, says Nahid Gani (pronounced nah-heed go-knee), a research scientist. There was some uplift in East Africa as early as 40 million years ago, but "most of these topographic features developed between 7 million and 2 million years ago."A Wall Rises and New Species Evolve"Although the Wall of Africa started to form around 30 million years ago, recent studies show most of the uplift occurred between 7 million and 2 million years ago, just about when hominins split off from African apes, developed bipedalism and evolved bigger brains," the Ganis write."Nature built this wall, and then humans could evolve, walk tall and think big," says Royhan Gani. "Is there any characteristic feature of the wall that drove human evolution?"The answer, he believes, is the variable landscape and vegetation resulting from uplift of the Wall of Africa, which created "a topographic barrier to moisture, mostly from the Indian Ocean" and dried the climate. He says that contrary to those who cite global climate cycles, the climate changes in East Africa were local and resulted from the uplift of different parts of the wall at different times.Royhan Gani says the change from forests to a patchwork of woodland and open savannah did not happen everywhere in East Africa at the same time, and the changes also happened in East Africa later than elsewhere in the world.The Ganis studied the roughly 300-mile-by-300-mile Ethiopian Plateau - the most prominent part of the Wall of Africa. Previous research indicated the plateau reached its present average elevation of 8,200 feet 25 million years ago. The Ganis analyzed rates at which the Blue Nile River cut down into the Ethiopian Plateau, creating a canyon that rivals North America's Grand Canyon. They released those findings in the September 2007 issue of GSA Today, published by the Geological Society of America.The conclusion: There were periods of low-to-moderate incision and uplift between 29 million and 10 million years ago, and again between 10 million and 6 million years ago, but the most rapid uplift of the Ethiopian Plateau (by some 3,200 vertical feet) happened 6 million to 3 million years ago.The Geotimes paper says other research has shown the Kenyan part of the wall rose mostly between 7 million and 2 million years ago, mountains in Tanganyika and Malawi were uplifted mainly between 5 million and 2 million years ago, and the wall's southernmost end gained most of its elevation during the past 5 million years."Clearly, the Wall of Africa grew to be a prominent elevated feature over the last 7 million years, thereby playing a prominent role in East African aridification by wringing moisture out of monsoonal air moving across the region," the Ganis write. That period coincides with evolution of human ancestors in the area.Royhan Gani says the earliest undisputed evidence of true bipedalism (as opposed to knuckle-dragging by apes) is 4.1 million years ago in Australopithecus anamensis, but some believe the trait existed as early as 6 million to 7 million years ago.The Ganis speculate that the shaping of varied landscapes by tectonic forces - lake basins, valleys, mountains, grasslands, woodlands - "could also be responsible, at a later stage, for hominins developing a bigger brain as a way to cope with these extremely variable and changing landscapes" in which they had to find food and survive predators.For now, Royhan Gani acknowledges the lack of more precise timeframes makes it difficult to link specific tectonic events to the development of upright walking, bigger brains and other key steps in human evolution."But it all happened within the right time period," he says. "Now we need to nail it down."



- The University of Utah

http://www.brightsurf.com/news/headlines/34875/Evolution_tied_to_Earth_movement.html



Who: The Ganis's - a husband-and-wife along with Students who at The University of Utah



What: Assume that because the ground movements formed mountains and valleys, creating environments that favored the emergence of humanity which is why most ancient artifacts ar descovered upon in ine African Region.



When: December 19th 2007.



Where:





This logic is well thought out and proven pretty well with basic facts. In addition i never even knew where most old artifacts were discoverd. This is a surprise to me along with probally many others . I probally been full of excite,ent if i discovered these. IN addition the Ganis's are probally amused with what they did. Along with many scientsits!

Sunday, May 27, 2007

5TH BLOG- IN CLASS RESPONSE



In class on Friday, May 25th we did a lab. This had to be the best lab so far. It was messy though! Our teacher placed corn starch in a beaker then sprinkled a little fod dye inside. Next to the beaker was a smaller one taht contained water. We then poored water into this mixture. It was so hard to stir. The spoon kept getting stuck. Then we were directed to pick up a chunk with our hands. It had teh weirdest feeling. I went first and boy can i say it was interesting!! This gooey substance became hard in an instance jsut by clenching your hand. I realezed if you apply pressure it tightens up. However if you leave it alone, it seems to flow at a fast paste and dangle off your hands. I enjoyed this lab very much. It made a connectionto the mantle of the earth. You see the mantle is flexible.It's made of solid rock and behaves like an extremely viscous liquid so it flows instead of fracturing. Just like the mixture we made.



-http://mediatheek.thinkquest.nl/~ll125/en/mantle.htm

-http://volcano.und.edu/vwdocs/vwlessons/lessons/Earths_layers/Earths_layers6.html


These two websites provide additional detailon the mantle of the earth and how it works and whats inside of it. The connection that i can make from this lab we did in class was to the actual substance inside of the earth's mantle. The gooey like substance would flow until pressure was applied, like a volcano or the substances inside the mantle. This lab helped teach us students what goes on in the mantle. In addition we had fun proforming it. Altough it was a little messy.