Plate Tectonic cycles have been happening on Earth as we know it today – with all its features – for around 3 billion years. What we currently see is just part of a cycle – a snapshot if you like
Gary Lewis, GEOetc, leads….. Discover Hawaii’s Active Volcanoes 3-9 July 2022 Trips for STEM & Geography Educators and friends. Pre-service teachers and College Students are welcome on this trip. Get on the email wait list for this trip: Please note
This is an activity where students listen to a 10-minute podcast on Weathering (Podcast is here) and then use what they learn to look for evidence in six photographs showing outcrops. They will find evidence for Biological, Chemical, and Physical
Geoaware, (Gary Lewis of GEOetc), leads….. Geocache on Hawaii’s Active Volcanoes 2022 A trip for geocachers from around the globe. NOW FULL The trip is open for people 18 years and older. 23-29 January 2022 Get on the email interest
Gary Lewis, GEOetc, leads….. Discover Hawaii’s Active Volcanoes 16-22 January 2022 Trips for STEM & Geography Educators, geology enthusiasts and friends. Pre-service teachers and College Students are welcome on this trip. Get on the email interest list for this trip:
You can find the GEO podcast on iTunes right here. You can also find GEO Podcast or all the major podcast capture platforms! (Go on…subscribe and not miss the new episodes) What are metamorphic rocks and how do they form?
I use mineral and rock collection cards with all my samples – even ones that are still sitting in plastic bags and boxes waiting for sorting and display. In the past, I used a range of scraps of paper for
You can find the GEO podcast on iTunes right here. You can also find GEO Podcast or all the major podcast capture platforms! (Go on…subscribe and not miss the new episodes) In this episode, I talk with Dr. Chris Spencer
You can find the GEO podcast on iTunes right here. You can also find GEO Podcast or all the major podcast capture platforms! (Go on…subscribe and not miss the new episodes) In this episode, I talk about four things a
In the 1920’s a Serbian geophysicist and astronomer called Milutin Milankovitch suggested that long term variations in how the Earth travels in space may affect climate change because of the effect these changes have on the amount of solar radiation