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Find inspiration and information here about all things geospatial for education.
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GeoEye Geospatial Satellite Imaging Products and Solutions - 100% Free Web Directory

GeoEye is the premier provider of satellite and aerial imagery, geospatial information (information referenced to a specific location), geospatial products, and solutions for the national security community, strategic partners, and commercial...
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Rescooped by Michelle Kinzel from Regional Geography
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New map pinpoints cities to avoid as sea levels rise

New map pinpoints cities to avoid as sea levels rise | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
Sydney, Tokyo and Buenos Aires are in for some of the biggest sea-level rises by 2100, finds one of the most comprehensive predictions to date

Via Seth Dixon
Tony Hall's curator insight, February 14, 2:31 AM

Could be really good to look at when discussing sustainability.

Rescooped by Michelle Kinzel from Geography Education
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A Photo Essay on School Sprawl

A Photo Essay on School Sprawl | GIS in Education | Scoop.it

"Schools used to be the heart of a neighborhood or community. Children and not a few teachers could walk to class, or to the playground or ball field on the weekend. This was relatively easy to do, because the schools were placed within, not separated from, their neighborhoods. They were human-scaled and their architecture was not just utilitarian, but signaled their importance in the community. Now it has become hard to tell one from a Walmart or Target."

 

What better way to demonstrate the concepts of urban sprawl, automobile-dependent city planning and economies of scale than by analyzing the very geographic context of our schools themselves?  This is a very nicely arranged photo essay that most could spark conversation and would foster some discussion on how best to plan neighborhoods and spatially arrange the city.   

 

Tags: transportation, planning, sprawl, education, scale. 


Via Seth Dixon
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EARTH Masterpieces

The natural landscapes shown as captured by satellite imagery is as beautiful as anything artists have ever created.  Some of the colors shown in the video may seem otherworldy.  Most of those color anomalies are due to the fact that remotely sensed images have more information in them than just what we see in the visible portion of the electromagnetic spectrum.  Some of these images are processed to show different bands so we can visually interpret data such as what is in the near infra-red band, skewing the color palette.


Via Seth Dixon
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Rescooped by Michelle Kinzel from Geography Education
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Extreme Weather and Drought Are Here to Stay

Extreme Weather and Drought Are Here to Stay | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
It is increasingly clear that we already live in the era of human-induced climate change, with unprecedented weather and climate extremes.

 

I don't delight in sharing the bad news.  So is this drought just a freak anomaly or a sign of a new normal?


Via Seth Dixon
Seth Dixon's comment, August 13, 2012 2:28 PM
The graphic was not connected to the article. It was linked on a PBS facebook page and I linked the juxtaposition of the graphic and the NY Times article. Here is the FB page: https://www.facebook.com/EarthTheOperatorsManual.Page Personally, an entire century as a baseline of comparison does not feel like cherrypicking data. True the Earth is an incredibly complex system that controlling for all variables is in essence impossible, but denying that the system has changed seems foolish to me. Why has the system changed? I'm okay with that being a reasonable debate worthy of academics.
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Discovering and Mapping Natural Hazards with LiDAR | Geotecnologia

Discovering and Mapping Natural Hazards with LiDAR | Geotecnologia | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
Dogami serves up 33 terbytes of Lidar data to Oregonians using Esri technology...
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NASA Earth Observatory - Vegetation Index

The NDVI (Normalized Digital Vegetation Index) is on of the primary methods for detecting healthy vegetation using satellite imagery.  This also serves as a useful way to distinguish between distinct ecological and agricultural regions and the temporal patterns of planting seasons.  

 

This video was found on a site titled "Explorations in agricultural research" with many great links http://zerogravitygardening.blogspot.com/


Via Seth Dixon
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Rescooped by Michelle Kinzel from Geography Education
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Antipodes Map: The other side of the world

Antipodes Map: The other side of the world | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
In geography, the antipodes of any place on Earth is its antipodal point; that is, the region on the Earth's surface which is diametrically opposite t...

 

I know that most Americans have learned at an early age that if you dig a hole through the center of the Earth, you'll end up in China.  Geologic and impossibilities aside, most Americans would actually end up in the Indian Ocean as displayed by this clever pairing up maps that shows the user the Antipode of any given place on Earth.  Try it out!  http://www.antipodemap.com/


Via Seth Dixon
melissa b's comment, August 30, 2012 10:52 AM
Very neat, if I dug a hole through New Zealand i would end up in Spain so cool.
Lisa Fonseca's comment, September 4, 2012 7:06 PM
Interesting website to show the accuracy of where someone will actually end up by digging a hole. While on the website I dug a hole in Portugal on the original map and ended up in the Tasman Sea located near New Zealand, on the antipode map. Out of curiosity I then dug a hole in China on the original map and ended up in Argentina on the antipode map.
Mark V's comment, September 5, 2012 7:46 AM
I dug a whole in Rhode Island and came out off the coast of southwestern Australia near Perth.
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Climate Change and Sustainability

Climate Change and Sustainability | GIS in Education | Scoop.it

I'll let the comic (by Pulitzer cartoonist Joel Pett) speak for itself. 


Via Seth Dixon
Mr. David Burton's comment, April 16, 2012 9:19 PM
That's funny!
Seth Dixon's comment, April 16, 2012 10:01 PM
Too funny to keep to myself.
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Shakemap usc00094j4

Shakemap usc00094j4 | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
USGS Earthquake Hazards Program, responsible for monitoring, reporting, and researching earthquakes and earthquake hazards (EQ ShakeMap | M 5.8 - SULAWESI, INDONESIA http://t.co/AN7hoOXT | #GIS #geospatial...)...
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Food Deserts - It's All In the Mapping

Food Deserts - It's All In the Mapping | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
Today's New York Times has a front page article on food deserts in the US by Gina Kolata (Studies Question the Pairing of Food Deserts and Obesity ). Food deserts are places that are believed to be lacking in healthy and affordable food.
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ArcGIS Online Blog : What's New in ArcGIS Online (February 2012)

ArcGIS Online Blog : What's New in ArcGIS Online (February 2012) | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
The February 2012 ArcGIS Online update has just been released. This latest update includes additions and enhancements as described below, as well as a number of bug fixes and behind-the-scenes improvements.
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A GeoGeek in STEM Education • ArcGIS Explorer Online (Webmap series)

A GeoGeek in STEM Education • ArcGIS Explorer Online (Webmap series) | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
ArcGIS Explorer Online (Webmap series) http://explorer.arcgis.com/ “ “In addition to basic mapping, users can conduct queries of feature data. Users can create map notes with special symbology and...
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Google LatLong: Imagery Update: Week of December 12th

Google LatLong: Imagery Update: Week of December 12th | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
Imagery Update: Week of December 12th http://t.co/h8vwgZQu | #geospatial #GIS...
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Where Does Your Water Come From?

Where Does Your Water Come From? | GIS in Education | Scoop.it

This interactive map documents where 443 million people around the world get there water (although the United States data is by far the most extensive).  Most people can't answer this question.  A recent poll by The Nature Conservancy discoverd that 77% of Americans (not on private well water) don't know where their water comes from, they just drink it.  This link has videos, infographics and suggestions to promote cleaner water.  This is also a fabulous example of an embedded map using ArcGIS Online to share your geospatial data with a wider audience.  

 

Tags: GIS, water, fluvial, environment, ESRI, pollution, development, consumption, resources, mapping, environment depend, cartography, geospatial. 


Via Seth Dixon
Nic Hardisty's comment, October 15, 2012 9:01 AM
I was definitely unaware of where my drinking water came from. This is nice, user-friendly map... Hopefully it gets updated regularly, as it will be interesting to see how these sources change over time.
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Wind Map

Wind Map | GIS in Education | Scoop.it

This is a repeat, but you simply MUST check out Louisiana right now on this map as Hurricane Isaac has made landfall.  

 

"This interactive map is a 'nearly live' dynamic display of United States winds patterns (speed, direction and broad spatial context).  Click on the image to see the animated, large version."


Via Seth Dixon
Ken Morrison's comment, August 30, 2012 8:25 PM
That was cool. Thanks for sharing. I have a new fun tool for virtual storm chasing. I'm not as adventurous as I used to be. Is there any chance that there is an international version? We had a big typhoon in Asia this past week. Crazy weather.
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Back to School with Google Earth

Back to School with Google Earth | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
Amazing things about Google Earth - news, features, tips, technology, and applications...

 

If you've never seen the Google Earth Blog, this post is a good primer to the educational possibilities that this technology opens up to teachers.  It is not just for geography teachers; it can be a visualization tool for any subject that has real-world applications that take place somewhere. 


Via Seth Dixon
Lindsey Robinson's comment, August 27, 2012 5:22 PM
Google Earth is an amazing way to teach children of all ages (and adults for that matter) about the geography of the Earth. It is such an abstract way of conveying geographic concepts. What an amazing teaching tool....and as an added bonus, it's FREE!!
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Shakemap us2012eea6

Shakemap us2012eea6 | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
USGS Earthquake Hazards Program, responsible for monitoring, reporting, and researching earthquakes and earthquake hazards (EQ ShakeMap | M 5.5 - PACIFIC-ANTARCTIC RIDGE http://t.co/OQ6Yeb3k | #GIS...
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Registration | 2012 Esri International User Conference

Esri's GIS (geographic information systems) mapping software helps you understand and visualize data to make decisions based on the best information and analysis. (RT @Esri: #EsriUC--Where ideas are born!
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If All of Earth's Water was put into Single Sphere

If All of Earth's Water was put into Single Sphere | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
If All of Earth's Water was put into Single Sphere, from the USGS Water Science School...

 

"This picture shows the size of a sphere that would contain all of Earth's water in comparison to the size of the Earth. The blue sphere sitting on the United States, reaching from about Salt Lake City, Utah to Topeka, Kansas, has a diameter of about 860 miles (about 1,385 kilometers) , with a volume of about 332,500,000 cubic miles (1,386,000,000 cubic kilometers). The sphere includes all the water in the oceans, seas, ice caps, lakes and rivers as well as groundwater, atmospheric water, and even the water in you, your dog, and your tomato plant."

 

The sphere does not include the potential water that some scientists believe may be trapped in the mantle (and thus not accessible on the surface).  For more about water that is not on or near the surface, see: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/03/0307_0307_waterworld.html


Via Seth Dixon
Gary Robertson's comment, May 7, 2012 9:36 PM
Water is also tied up in hydrated minerals in the rocks of the earth's crust. While not "free" it is still significant and is occasionally freed through subduction and volcanic activity. Furthermore, the earth's mantle may contain even more water than the rest combined! So, maybe the Single Sphere should be larger by more than the cube root of 2, or about 1,083 miles in diameter. See mantle water data at http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/03/0307_0307_waterworld.html
Seth Dixon's comment, May 7, 2012 11:08 PM
Thanks Green Uncle Mary! I mean Mean Uncle Gary!
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Bloom in the Baltic Sea | Geospatial | Scoop.it

Bloom in the Baltic Sea | Geospatial | Scoop.it | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
A colourful summer marine plankton bloom fills much of the Baltic Sea in this Envisat image. Plankton are microscopic marine plants that drift on or near the surface of the sea, by far the most abundant type of life found in the ocean.
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Street View finally arrives in Russia

Street View finally arrives in Russia | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
Google has just released Street View in Russia, and while it only covers two cities so far (Moscow and St. Petersburg), the coverage in those cities is quite solid.

Via Richard Petry
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US Geospatial Intelligence Foundation Scholarship Program ...

US Geospatial Intelligence Foundation Scholarship Program ... | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
Students studying geospatial intelligence or a related field are encouraged to submit their applications by the April 20 deadline. Graduating high school seniors, undergraduate, graduate and doctoral students can download ...
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Access ArcGIS Online in Nine New Languages | ArcWatch

Access ArcGIS Online in Nine New Languages | ArcWatch | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
The ArcGIS Online interface is now available in Arabic, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian, Simplified Chinese, and Spanish languages.
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GIS Education Community Blog : Earth Quiz: 20 Questions about Our Planet Using ArcGIS Online

GIS Education Community Blog : Earth Quiz: 20 Questions about Our Planet Using ArcGIS Online | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
Take a look at this image. Which waterfall is shown in this image? What clues exist on the landscape to help you choose among the three options listed? Where is this glaciated terrain located?
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International Perspectives on Teaching and Learning with GIS in Secondary Schools

International Perspectives on Teaching and Learning with GIS in Secondary Schools | GIS in Education | Scoop.it
This, the first publication to collate a broad international perspective on the pedagogical value of GIS technology in classrooms, offers an unprecedented range of expert views on the subject. Geographic Information Systems (GISs) ...
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