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Exploring Our Fluid Earth
Teaching Science as Inquiry
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Tips for Teachers: Paired-laser photogrammetry
Activity: Measuring Whale Dimensions
fyang
Tips for Teachers: Beer Mat Nematode
Worms: Phyla Platyhelmintes, Nematoda, and Annelida
fyang
Tips for Teachers: Various Response Behaviors
Activity: Aquatic Invertebrate Behavior
fyang
Additional Resource for Teachers: Rove Beetles
Weird Science: An Inordinate Fondness for Beetles
fyang
A video of an octopus going through a small hole!
Phylum Mollusca
fyang
Tips for Teachers: Additional Resources
Further Investigation: Phylum Porifera
fyang
Check out this link to the American Museum of Natural History's language activity with dinosaurs
Practices of Science: The Language of Science
kanesa
Life Thrives Within The Earth's Crust
Continental Movement by Plate Tectonics
kanesa
Tips for Teachers: Diversity of Extinct Aquatic Reptiles
Further Investigations: Reptiles
fyang
I was wondering if anyone has tried to relate this to isotopes...
Sampling for Abundance
MrsM
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Exploring Our Fluid Earth, a product of the Curriculum Research & Development Group (CRDG), College of Education. University of Hawaii, 2011. This document may be freely reproduced and distributed for non-profit educational purposes.