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Earth Science Classroom
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 12 ม.ค. 2021
The 'Earth Science Classroom' is a channel dedicated to exploring all scientific disciplines associated with earth science and environmental science. The channel is focused on how the Earth is formed, and its natural processes. As a science teacher, science education is one of the priorities of this channel, both for students and fellow teachers. This channel covers the following topics are topography, physical geography, geomorphology, atmospheric science, astronomy, oceanography, meteorology, astronomy, geology, geologic history & hydrology.
How To Create An Elevation Profile Graph From A Contour Map
Providing step-by-step guide to convert a contour map into an elevation profile graph. This technique is important to recognize both varying elevations, gradients and identify physical features on the Earth's surface. This video is part of Unit 2 Topography & Mapping.
มุมมอง: 27
วีดีโอ
Environmental Science Unit Plan: Ecosystems & Environments
มุมมอง 1247 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Discussing how a unit plan is created for Environmental Science. This unit plan is for the curriculum I teach and focuses on ecosystems & environments (Unit 2). This video summarizes the sequence of multiple topics or subjects in Unit 2, and provides an insight into the subject mater discussed in each topic. #teaching #teachingscience #environmentalscience #ecosystem
What Is A Feedback Loop?
มุมมอง 10321 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Discussing Earth as a system and how feedback plays an important role in the changes to that system. Both types of feedback and examples are explained.
Autumn Equinox: Length Of Day & Night
มุมมอง 50821 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
Discussing how latitude plays an important role of controlling the amount of daylight a location has. The Autumnal equinox is a time in the year where the relative position of the Earth and Sun (tilt) creates an even 12 hrs. of daylight and nighttime along the equator. However, this is not 'equal' when you change latitude.
Teaching & Unit Planning: Mineral Unit Plan
มุมมอง 99วันที่ผ่านมา
Discussing a concept map covering the lessons, labs and sequence of the minerals section of the geology course. The ability to plan and organize a set of lessons covering a specific topic is important for any teacher. This unit plan discusses starting with geochemistry (atoms & bonding) and progresses into mineral composition, identification, types and crust composition. #science #teachingscien...
Sedimentary Rocks: Types of Coal
มุมมอง 4.2K14 วันที่ผ่านมา
Discussing the four main types of coal, the 'ranking' system and various characteristics.
How Does Coal Form? What Is Coalification?
มุมมอง 1.7K14 วันที่ผ่านมา
Discussing how coal forms through a process of metamorphism and coalification. 00:00 Introduction 00:31 Origins of coal 01:30 What is coal? 03:28 Biochemical phase 05:49 Geochemical phase 08:29 Coal variations (grade or rank) 09:28 Formation variabilities 11:20 Organic Macerals 12:37 What is coalification? 13:29 Future of coal
Earth Science Teacher Inspiration: I Love To Fly
มุมมอง 10021 วันที่ผ่านมา
Earth Science Teacher Inspiration: I Love To Fly
Old Harry Rocks: Spectacular Jurassic Coast Landforms
มุมมอง 17521 วันที่ผ่านมา
Old Harry Rocks: Spectacular Jurassic Coast Landforms
Stream Table Lab & Stream & Sediment Flow
มุมมอง 133หลายเดือนก่อน
Stream Table Lab & Stream & Sediment Flow
Coastal Geomorphology: How Does A Sea Arch, Sea Cave, Stack & Stomp Form?
มุมมอง 126หลายเดือนก่อน
Coastal Geomorphology: How Does A Sea Arch, Sea Cave, Stack & Stomp Form?
The Incredible Rock Strata Of The Grand Canyon
มุมมอง 90หลายเดือนก่อน
The Incredible Rock Strata Of The Grand Canyon
Sedimentology: Types Of Depositional Environments
มุมมอง 204หลายเดือนก่อน
Sedimentology: Types Of Depositional Environments
Grand Canyon: Missing Time & The Great Unconformity
มุมมอง 113หลายเดือนก่อน
Grand Canyon: Missing Time & The Great Unconformity
The Grand Canyon: Journey Through Geologic Time
มุมมอง 349หลายเดือนก่อน
The Grand Canyon: Journey Through Geologic Time
Geologic Principles: Law of Baked Margins Or Contacts
มุมมอง 494หลายเดือนก่อน
Geologic Principles: Law of Baked Margins Or Contacts
Geologic Principles: Law of Inclusions
มุมมอง 488หลายเดือนก่อน
Geologic Principles: Law of Inclusions
Sedimentary Rocks And Their Depositional Environments
มุมมอง 1652 หลายเดือนก่อน
Sedimentary Rocks And Their Depositional Environments
Geologic Principles: Law Of Cross-Cutting Relationships
มุมมอง 4842 หลายเดือนก่อน
Geologic Principles: Law Of Cross-Cutting Relationships
Geologic Principles: Law of Lateral Continuity
มุมมอง 3082 หลายเดือนก่อน
Geologic Principles: Law of Lateral Continuity
Me expecting some tricky earthquake simulator to disrupt the water … him - picks up one end of tray… Me 🤨
I would have used a fancy earthquake machine to simulate realistic water displacement, but all I had was to lift it!
Bunch of nerds
Wind is the second main reason for the waves. The first one is Coriolis effect
Same thing goes with air
Water's green cause it's St Patrick's Day 😂
Why was the water green?
That day of the lab demo I had extra green food coloring and thought it would be good to alter the water color. Hopefully making it more visible or obvious for the students.
Ok hear me out, but what if Joel say he wrote “our future days” , I prob sound crazy but maybe?? Nope I just sound delusional
Very well explained, thank you 😃👍 I subscribed ✍️
Is this a demonstration of common sense? Not in college and I’m looking at this video like why do we explain what’s understood. He’s going to break the news to the class that gravity is indeed existent
Cat 4 hurricane at landfall
Maybe the water is green because this kind of tsunami happened in Greenland 🤔😍
Imagine Scaling down Kilometers of Ocean Floors Into A Meter Wife Tub, You Become a Bacteria At the Shore. 😂 🌊
Watched today a number of videos from Japan 2011 tsunami & some were 8-16m some more. One hit buildings & trees & water was launched 35m in the air & just mowed down trees like a hedge being flattened. Incredible power. Substantial buildings carried away & some of it was just like flooding coming & coming relentlessly. The debris was as destructive piling up & pushing away more buildings etc. They then had huge continuous fires for miles that night. I suppose that helped clear & destroy a lot of the debris but wouldn't have survived that if trapped. We think we are pretty special yet we're not really anything more than a speck to Nature & especially the Universe.
I'm doing dynamic planet for science olympiad! this was helpful :D
Science Olympiad is a great club and competition! Good luck and enjoy the awesome topics
inversion, a new word for the day?
Models like this are so unbelievably effective at conveying concepts that are usually explained only through text or dated images. I would have loved to have had science classes like this
I don’t think it’s green cause it’s saint Patricks day
Not the most coherent explanation....
Water is green because its St. Paddies day. Sweet
Wow didn’t even think of this.
The earth is not supposed to be a container stop confusing us
And that's how you find the megalodon's underwater.
What
But the earth is flat and I though tsunamis was god dipping his toes in the water?
I think its also due to the gravitational disturbance caused due to Moon's position to Earth
I thought that perhaps you would have a moveable flap under the water to simulate a piece of the ocean floor moving rather than its totality
Kids bein pricks when theyll probably never do anything to help anyone but themselves let alone being a teacher
This will be my science project.
Interesting to see this after that trapped tsunami in Greenland rolled back and forth for 9 days and was captured on seismometers all around the world.
we have bathtubs but thanks. lab... pff
Just imagine how much movement is going on on that ocean floor to form a wave that Big that does that much destruction
I thouht stunamis is bigger then that
Looks like my piss after a menstrual cycle
Buddy just formed the dangerous “Three Sisters” wave that wrecks the biggest of ships 💀
Yeah it dumped rains in Guatemala.
Who the fuck is patty
Well, that's a good example but the sea is already in tidal movement so it can be either buffered or exaggerated also.
Wow foreign education system is great with practical knowledge in India teacher even don't come to class worst education system
It would be nice if you can create a tsunami on a spinning globe and see where the water goes you can use gravity to keep the water in place as they say.
🇵🇸
This is Evony.
Pousse café!
I feel like a 4 year old have esplaned this.
Dish drying rack when you're done with them 💪🏻
Also known as a thermocline
Simply explained ❤
Out of all the natural disasters, this is the scariest way to go.
how much time do you have to run, after you see receding water?
Thats how the black sea works. Fresh water on top, salt water on the bottom
The dude that let out the first "whoa" had absolutely no clue what he was looking at. 😂