Archive for December, 2008

Polar Bears May Prefer Seals for Dinner but Goose Eggs May Have To Do

Until now, images of polar bears have not brought to mind a bear snacking on goose eggs. That may change with the reporting of Robert Rockwell, a research associate in ornithology at the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH), and graduate student Linda Gormezano in the magazine Polar Biology and other researchers’ observations.
While the polar […]

Posted in Topics: Animals, Arctic, Current News, Polar News & Notes

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TappedIn Tour: Earth’s Changing Surface

Tonight at 7pm EST we’re having an online chat in the TappedIn online learning community - http://tappedin.org. We’ll be working our way through the December 2008 issue of the Beyond Penguins and Polar Bears online magazine. If you can’t join us, you can still take “our tour” below. We meet the first Thursday of each […]

Posted in Topics: Antarctica, Earth and Space Science, Presentations, Science

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Integrating Informational Text and Science Through the Polar Regions

Jessica Fries-Gaither will present “Integrating Informational Text and Science Through the Polar Regions” on Wednesday, December 10, 2008 at the International Reading Association’s Regional Conference in Nashville, TN. The presentation be be held at 9 a.m. in room 102 of the Nashville Convention Center. We hope you’ll be able to attend!
If you can’t attend the […]

Posted in Topics: Presentations, Professional Development, Reading, Writing

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Learning from Prehistoric Climates

What was the climate like when the earth was warmer than it is today? To find the answer, researchers in a group called Pliocene Research, Interpretation and Synoptic Mapping (PRISM) are trying to reconstruct a warm period that existed 3 million years ago.
Led by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), scientists are examining fossils from the […]

Posted in Topics: Current News, Polar News & Notes, Science

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Wilkins Ice Sheet at Risk of Breaking Off

The European Space Agency reports new rifts on the Wilkins Ice Sheet, which is connected to two islands by a strip of ice. The rifts could cause the largest ice shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula to destroy the strip, or bridge, of ice that has been preventing the shelf from breaking away.  
Wilkins Ice Sheet, […]

Posted in Topics: Antarctica, Current News, Education, Oceans, Polar News & Notes

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