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There are 11 videos in this category and 56 videos in 7 subcategories.
Category Videos
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 7 - 18
1028 Views:
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How the ocean and its salt content can change the weather patterns and a climate change that impacts the Earth. The impact could go on for decades. Good video for a discussion.
September 16, 2010 at 11:54 PM
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 10 - 18
864 Views:
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Causes and effects of global warming
September 7, 2011 at 08:02 AM
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 7 - 12
424 Views:
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See how greenhouse gasses are suspected of causing Earth to heat up in this animated BrainPOP movie. A quiz is also included with this link. (Approximate run time 2:00)
May 31, 2012 at 12:04 PM
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 11 - 18
1095 Views:
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This video shows how the next Ice Age could start and its impact on the Earth. Very well done with excellent graphics. A good way to explore the impact of global warming. Not for younger students. Shows impact of freezing on humans, too.
September 12, 2010 at 11:30 PM
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 12 - 18
1043 Views:
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Learn about what we do about the rapid climate changes. In this video you will also learn more about what the atmospheric radiation measurement program does. (07:47)
May 1, 2011 at 08:23 AM
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 18 - 18
507 Views:
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They can be small Do’s or big Do’s or just extraordinary Do’s. But when you listen to the story of, Contraction
& Convergence is a response to the objective of the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). It is a rational,
... science-based global framework to share the removal of CO2 emissions
globally at a rate where we solve the problem of climate change faster
than we are creating it. Aubrey Meyer, Ex concert musician turned climate thinker.
These speeches light a fire in your belly to go and Do your thing, your
passion, the thing that sits in the back of your head each day, just
waiting, and waiting for you to follow your heart. (50:19)
[more]
May 8, 2012 at 01:51 PM
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 7 - 13
483 Views:
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From extreme weather to threatened ways of life, the effects of climate change are real, and they are happening right now around the globe. As the Earth warms, the atmosphere contains more energy and moisture. These drive extreme weather, such as cri...ppling heat waves, heavier rains and more powerful hurricanes. It even causes severe drought in some places -- because a warming Earth increases evaporation, too, drying out some places and causing a lot more dust and particles to get in the air. In the mountains of the American West, warming temperatures are already having a big effect on the delicate balance of life. (2:30)
[more]
April 22, 2012 at 12:19 AM
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 7 - 13
443 Views:
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We already know that rapid climate change is happening, but how bad could it get? The answer lies with us, human beings. That's because the decisions we make now will determine if the effects of rapid climate change are mild or extreme. Scientists wh...o study the climate tell us that if we continue to add carbon to the atmosphere at the current rate, the Earth will get a lot warmer in the coming years and decades. They use big, brainy computers to simulate what the climate will look like in the future. (2:30)
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April 22, 2012 at 12:28 AM
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 7 - 13
416 Views:
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Rapid climate change isn’t something that will happen in the future. It’s a problem that started when your grandparents were young. That means that today some of the early effects are happening all around us. In the mountains of the American West, wa...rming temperatures are already having a big effect on the delicate balance of life. (2:32)
[more]
April 22, 2012 at 12:24 AM
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Not Right For WatchKnowLearn
Ages: 16 - 18
382 Views:
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Science columnist Lee Hotz describes a remarkable project at WAIS
Divide, Antarctica, where a hardy team are drilling into
ten-thousand-year-old ice to extract vital data on our changing climate.
Robert Lee Hotz is the science columnist for the ...Wall Street Journal,
where he writes about cutting-edge research on climate change,
cosmology, molecular medicine, the human brain and much more . He has traveled three times to the South Pole. (09:46)
[more]
July 25, 2012 at 09:32 PM
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