EDUCATOR TOOLS >

Webinar Archive

Create Courses/Textbooks

Student Resources

Continuing Conversations (180 Blog sites)


THEMES >

American Indian & Indigenous People


Climate & Agriculture


Climate & Food Security


Climate Change & Disasters


Climate Change & Security


Sea Level Rise/Coastal Adaptation


TED Talks Climate Series


Misconceptions & Skeptics


Climate Change FAQ's


How Do We Know?


CONTENT BY PARTNERS >

   CLEAN

   EcoTipping Points

   Livermore National Laboratory

   National Geographic

   Public Broadcasting System PBS

   UCAR – COMET

   Will Steger Foundation

 

TED e-Book: Deep Water As Polar Ice Melts, Scientists Debate How High Our Oceans Will Rise

Sea level:

RESOURCE: TED e-Book: Deep Water As Polar Ice Melts, Scientists Debate How High Our Oceans Will Rise

SUMMARY


In the new ebook, Deep Water, readers go along on the quirky adventures of a crew of rock hunters trying to learn how high the sea might rise. They witness discoveries of physical evidence and learn about the theories leading scientists to believe we must drastically reduce the tonnage of carbon dioxide we spew into the air.
Rivers of defrosting ice are flowing off polar glaciers and surging into the sea. As the flow becomes a deluge, the livelihoods—and very lives—of tens of millions of people living near coastlines will soon be in jeopardy.
Here’s what Bill McKibben says about Deep Water:

“Here's a fine account of some of the people trying to solve that [sea level rise] puzzle, piece by scary piece.”

Deep Water is available as an innovative book app, with videos, charts, photos and audio asides throughout the text, to bring you on a multimedia adventure about the urgent research, and clarifying the puzzles of Earth's polar meltdown. Follow the Australian journey on an interactive map. View videos and computer animations about the science. Listen to an iceberg crack off a glacier.
 

GOALS

To engage the user in scientific research on sea level rise and increase awareness of the impacts associated with it.

ACTIVITY DESCRIPTION AND TEACHING MATERIALS

Watch >> TED Book Trailer

Deep Water As Polar Ice Melts, Scientists Debate How High Our Oceans Will Rise

 

 

TEACHING NOTES / CONTEXT FOR USE

Deep Water makes innovative use of the new TED book-app, with videos, charts, photos and audio asides throughout the text, to bring us a multimedia adventure about the urgent research, and clarifying the puzzles of Earth's polar meltdown. Follow the Australian journey on an interactive map. View videos and computer animations about the science. Listen to an iceberg crack off a glacier. Great for the scientifically curious, and for environmental course reading lists.

  • Buy the Deep Water app for $2.99 and load it in minutes onto your iPad, iPhone or iPod. You can also download the text (without multimedia features) for Android devices, including the Nook, Kindle and Android phones.

ASSESSMENT

Assessment is at the discretion of the educator and how these materials are applied.

REFERENCES AND RESOURCES

Critical Acclaim

"Sea level rise is one of the great unanswered puzzles of our overheated futures. Here's a fine account of some of the people trying to solve that puzzle, piece by scary piece."

Bill McKibben

SHORT DESCRIPTION

About Deep Water, a TED ebook

Rivers of defrosting ice are flowing off polar glaciers and surging into the sea. As the flow becomes a deluge, the livelihoods—and very lives—of tens of millions of people living near coastlines will soon be in jeopardy.

Dan Grossman, veteran science journalist and regular contributor to public radio, and National Geographic blogger, joined a colorful team of climate researchers in the Australian outback studying how high and how quickly the oceans might rise.

In Deep Water, Dan brings us along on this quirky crew's adventures, while at the same time filling us in on the intriguing science of sea-level research. We witness discoveries of physical evidence and learn about the theories leading scientists to believe we must drastically reduce the tonnage of carbon dioxide we spew into the air.

0 Comments

Add Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment. Click here to login