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GeoJuice is an image bank, designed to celebrate the geography of our planet. It is aimed primarily at geography teachers but should be of interest to most people. Each image is accompanied by a narrative, which is in turns, descriptive, explanatory and confrontational. The images on GeoJuice include connections to some of the best sources of free images for geographers on the web.

The GeoJuice web site is accompanied by CDs containing a ready-made archive of images of a particular country, region or theme. All of the rights managed “GeoCom” and “GeoJuice” images / graphics (high-res 900x600 jpegs - just right for dropping into presentations) are carried on the CD-ROM.

The CDs contain additional images and also large tiffs for marketing and worksheet purposes.

 

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Subscription details, back copies of the SAGT journals and free Curriculum for Excellence posters are all to be found in the “our services” section in the navigation bar on the left. Our planet is awesome. Geography teachers are awesome! Celebrate and enjoy!

 
         
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Dave Govoni, who is a “palaeontologist gone bad” (but I don’t believe him), works for the USGS as an information scientist. He has posted a rather wordy, but extremely interesting presentation on http://www.slideshare.net/dgovoni
entitled “Scientific Information Management at the U.S. Geological Survey: Issues, Challenges, and a collaborative Approach to Identifying and Applying Solutions”. Right now the geographers will be powering down while Alan McKirdy and a few others at SNH will be sitting bolt upright. Bear with me. The interesting bit is the introduction of the term “Communities of Practice” (CoPs) which Dave and his co-author, Thomas Gunther, credit to Etienne Wenger (whose introductory paper on CoPs at www.ewenger.com is also well worth reading).

Communities of practice are groups of people who share a concern or a passion for something they do and learn how to do it better as they interact regularly. Having the same job title or belonging to the same professional association doesn’t do it. It is the interaction bit, the learning together bit, which is important. CoPs need to be understood and encouraged. Read Dave and Etienne’s contributions and see if you agree. It is also interesting to compare this basically North American viewpoint on problem solving with Richard Muir’s advocacy of the power of the amateur. There is a lot of common ground. Anyway, remember its easy to start interacting with GeoJuice. Just take out your subscription and start producing your visual essays, graphics etc. to share with the rest of us. Contribute. Grow. Enjoy.

The geography of the collapse in bee colony numbers in North America in particular is fascinating and really has to be passed on to our students. Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) is only really scary because we don’t know what it is. The geography of the the agriculture (extensive, monocultural farms), a system which neccessitates the transportation of millions of bees around the USA each year, is well researched and understood. The need for changes to this system is also well understood. Give the kids the facts and ask them how to improve farming practices in the almond groves of California and the blueberry fields of Maine. Now that’s a fat question! A good starting point is this clip from the BBC News site -

http://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/newsid_6710000/ newsid_6713600/6713675.stm?bw=bb&mp=rm - 14k


This problem is undoubtedly related to environmentally unfriendly farming practices so it was heartening to read about the recent purchase in Florida of 187,000 acres of sugar cane farmland which is to be taken out of production in an effort to secure the future of a vital ecosystem. “In the wake of the deal, US Sugar is expected to cease operations in Florida, where cane harvesting brought the company an estimated $400m in annual profits. Sugar beet producers would in position to gain a foothold on the American natural sweetener market.”


View the slideshow at
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/gallery/
2008/jun/26/conservation.endangeredhabitats
?picture=335290112


Check out the Toll Bar floods presentation while you are there as well. Have a great summer holiday!

You’ve earned it. Thank you.

 

China next on CD4!

The Gardens of Kyoto

China Earthquake

The Price of Oil

Population

Solar power station

 
         
 
 
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