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Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions Jessica Fries-Gaither Ohio State University [email protected]

Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

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Page 1: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

Jessica Fries-GaitherOhio State University

[email protected]

Page 2: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

Kulusuk, GreenlandNick Russill, Flickr

Page 3: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

Scott tent at a field camp, AntarcticaMike Cheadle, National Science Foundation

Page 4: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

Northern lights over GreenlandNick Russill, Flickr

Page 5: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

Nacreous Clouds above Ross Island, AntarcticaChad Carpenter, National Science Foundation

Page 6: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

Autumn Tundra in AlaskaJim Laundre, Arctic LTER

Page 7: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

The McMurdo Dry Valleys, AntarcticaPeter Rejcek, National Science Foundation

Page 8: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

Polar bear cubsUS Fish and Wildlife Service

Page 9: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

A researcher watches an Emperor PenguinKristan Hutchinson, National Science Foundation

Page 10: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

A glacier in AlaskaSteve Wall, Flickr

Page 11: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

Icebergs in McMurdo Sound, AntarcticaKris Kuenning, National Science Foundation

Page 12: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

An Inuit women fishesfor Tom CodUS Fish and Wildlife Service

Page 13: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

US Antarctic Program participantDJ Jennings, National Science Foundation

Page 14: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

An icebreaker on the Arctic OceanChris Linder, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

Page 15: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

Geologists in the Transantarctic MountainsJohn Goodge, University of Minnesota

Page 16: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

A juvenile humpback whale off the Antarctic PeninsulaSue Sheridan

Page 17: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

A caribou on the Arctic tundraCode Poet, Flickr

Page 18: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

Pancake ice forms on both the Arctic and Southern OceansZee Evans, National Science Foundation

Page 19: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

Mt. Erebus, Antarctica’s most active volcanoNick Powell, National Science Foundation

Page 20: Science, Literacy, and the Polar Regions

Thank you!

Jessica [email protected]

http://beyondpenguins.nsdl.org/

Funded by the National Science Foundation