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         Life On Shore Oceans:     more detail
  1. Ecosystems - Life on an Ocean Shore by Stuart A. Kallen, 2003-07-29
  2. A Life on the Ocean Wave and on the Shore by Peter A. Embley, 2002-05-23
  3. A Life on the Ocean Wave and on Shore by Peter A. Embley, 2003-09
  4. Wave-Swept Shore: The Rigors of Life on a Rocky Coast by Mimi A. R. Koehl, 2006-03-07
  5. Harp on the Shore: Thoreau and the Sea by Williard Bonner, 1985-08
  6. A Jerk on One End: Reflections of a Mediocre Fisherman [2 Audio Cassettes/3 Hrs.] COMPLETE AND UNABRIDGED by Robert Hughes, 1999
  7. Miscellaneous views of California: Stray leaves from the Pacific; life and scenery on the western slopes, from the summtis of the Sierra Nevada to the shores of the Pacific Ocean by Edward Vischer, 1863

41. NMA - Marine Life - Window On Conservation
To help us understand the oceans and the life they contain, we Sadly, most strandedanimals have died by the time they reach the shore, but they can still
http://www.national-aquarium.co.uk/marinelife/conservation.asp

Window on Conservation
Marine Life Home Page Water Life ... The Twighlight Zone Window on Conservation Window on Conservation
To help us understand the oceans and the life they contain, we carry out a number of conservation and research projects. A glimpse of some of these can be seen through our 'Window on Conservation' exhibit. Watch our aquarists at work as they tend the breeding tanks containing seahorses, cardinal fish and soft corals.
As we become involved in more projects they will be highlighted here. This is also the location for the latest news on conservation projects being carried out by our partner organisations in the Plymouth Marine Partnership. Our aim is to become self sufficient in as many species as possible and to pass on surplus stock to other public aquariums throughout the world - by reducing the pressure on wild specimens we hope to ensure their survival.
Encouraging animals to breed
By creating the best possible conditions for these animals in captivity we can encourage them to breed and produce offspring. We can also learn about their needs in the wild and thus aid their conservation in natural habitats.

42. Oceans And Sea Animals
oceans Units at Athena A directory listing units and indicating age levels, studentactivities, and background Rocky Sea shore life Information and photos.
http://www.argotlibrary.com/oceans.html
Oceans and Sea Animals Animals Australian Animals Birds Frogs ... All About Oceans and Seas From Enchanted Learning @ Sea includes daily dispatches from marine expeditions Alaska Wildlife Notebook Series
Provides information and illustrations about more than 100 animals found in Alaska including big game, birds, fish, marine mammals, fur bearers, small game, amphibians, and reptiles. From the Alaska Department of Fish and Game The Blue Planet - a natural history of the oceans
Includes outlines of each episode of this BBC TV program as well as additional information, the sound track, a deep sea treasure hunt, and the Blue Planet Challenges Bridge Ocean Sciences Education Teacher Resource Center Chesapeake Bay Project
The largest estuary in the U.S. with a complex ecosystem that includes important habitats and food webs Coastal Shoreline
Dolphins
Earth Observatory
"The purpose of NASA's Earth Observatory is to provide a freely-accessible publication on the Internet where the public can obtain new satellite imagery and scientific information about our home planet." Covers atmosphere, oceans, land, energy and life Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution Ichthyology (Fish) at the Florida Museum of Natural History Just For Kids
Contains information about how to become a biologist, how to avoid a shark attack, as well as Fish and Shark References. At the Education Section students can learn about the different groups of fish, how fish swim, how fish use adaptation, and the different parts of a fish and shark

43. Oceans
j578.777 Taylor. From shore to ocean floor; how life survives in the sea. Illustratedby Haris Petie. j574.52636 8273. life in the oceans / Norbert Wu.
http://www.lkwdpl.org/schools/elempath/oceans/
    WELCOME TO MRS. STENZEL'S
    OCEANS
    PATHFINDER PAGE
    THIRD GRADE
    LINCOLN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL WORLD WIDE WEB LINKS SHIPWRECKS OCEAN LIFE Animals:
    Plants:
    • Learn all about Seaweed at this site. Marine plant life and algae information can be found here!

44. Auckland Museum : Oceans
oceans oceans gallery is the third installment of the New Zealand natural historystory. It features lifesized replicas of the sea shore and inter-tidal zone
http://www.akmuseum.org.nz/web/content.cfm?Id=240

45. MSO Mobile Small Passenger Vessel Information Package - Life Saving Equipment Re
oceans, cold water, , without, -, 100% Inflatable Bouyant Apparatus. warmwater, -,, 50% life Floats. more than 3 miles from shore, cold water,
http://www.uscg.mil/d8/mso/mobile/old site/inspections/Smallpassenger/tblifesavi

Port State Control
Domestics Fishing Vessels Small Passenger Vessels Table of Contents A. Introduction B. Plan Submittal C. Lifesaving D. Firefighting E. Vessel Control F. Stability G. Miscellaneous H. Drug Testing SMALL PASSENGER VESSEL INFORMATION PACKAGE Section C - Life Saving Equipment Requirements Section C: Life Preservers 46 CFR 180.71 - 180.78 Type Required Only Type I life preservers with Coast Guard Approval Numbers 160.002, 160.005 and 160.055 are approved for all passenger carrying vessels. Quantity Required One adult type life preserver is required for each person aboard the vessel.
In addition, unless the service is such that children are never carried, there shall be provided a number of approved life preservers suitable for children equal to at least 10% of the number of adult life preservers required to be carried. If the number of children carried exceeds the 10% number, then additional child size life jackets must be carried so that each child has an appropriate size life preserver.

46. Acadia National Park - Shoreline Discovery
Braus, Judy, ed. Ranger Rick's Nature Scope Diving Into oceans. Color 'n'Learn Tidepool life. Butzow, John. Have You Seen the shore Before?
http://www.nps.gov/acad/eeweb/shoreline.htm

    Shoreline Discovery
    Fifth Grade - Spring
    Coastal natural history is explored as students take a close look at the variety of life in the intertidal areas - both rocky shore and mud flats. Special attention is given to animal adaptations.
    Sample Student Activity
    item available from Acadia's Educator's Resource Library
    General Bibliography
    Bascom, Willard. Waves and Beaches: The Dynamics of the Ocean Surface . Garden City, NY: Anchor Press/Doubleday, 1980. Berrill, Michael and Deborah Berrill. A Sierra Club Naturalists' Guide, The North Atlantic Coast: Cape Cod to Newfoundland . San Francisco, CA: Sierra Club Books, 1981. Calhoun, Aram J.K., et al. The Wetlands of Acadia National Park and Vicinity . Joint publication of Maine Agricultural and Forest Experiment Station; University of Maine, Department of Wildlife Ecology; National Park Service; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Carson, Rachel. The Edge of the Sea . Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1979. Coulombe, Deborah A. The Seaside Naturalist Gosner, Kenneth L. Peterson's Guide to the Atlantic Seashore
    Teacher Literature
    Bayer, Robert and Juanita Bayer.

47. Origins Of The Oceans And Its Life
Origins Of The oceans And Its life Where Submarines Lurk. the average depth of theseoceans is about of the continental margin nearest the shore, often flat
http://www.earthscape.org/t2/chs01/chs01d/chs01de.html

48. Ocean Systems Assignments Marine Life And Pollution
in terms of economic, quality of life, and food What processes along the shore areassociated with breaking are the largest waves usually found in the oceans?
http://www.earthscape.org/t1/bad04/bad04c.html

49. Lifelines - Habitats - Seashore
Site includes sections on Temperate oceans and Tropical oceans; lifeon the Rocky shore All about life in tidal pools and the tides.
http://midhudson.org/lifelines/lifelines1/hab-seashore.html
Seashore Homework help resources for grades K - 4 Biographies Communities Earth Science Endangered Species ... Weather More help for parents: Homework Help Sites Homework Tips Raising a Reader Science Projects ... About Lifelines Lifelines was chosen by School Library Journal as the Site of the Month in the October 2002 issue. Lifelines is a project by:
Dutchess County BOCES
and Mid-Hudson Library System
Poughkeepsie, NY
Magazine Articles from Searchasaurus
Enter library card number when asked. Don't have a library card? Get one - it's free!

50. Mrs. Elliott's Second Grade
Ocean life Movies Ocean WebQuests Submarine I paint a know that the water sheds leadto the oceans. We study about the shore, including estuaries, tide pools
http://www.myschoolonline.com/page/0,1871,24742-145616-27-2545,00.html

Home Page

Calendar

Class Newsletter

FunBrain Group 1
...
Dr. Seuss

OCEANS
Sea Shore

Continental Shelf

Continental Slope

Deep Ocean
... Nominate this site for the Showcase Mrs. Elliott's Second Grade OCEANS Ocean Life Movies Ocean WebQuests Submarine I paint a refrigerator box silver and add an expandable hose(dryer hose) from the top of the box to the ceiling. I cut a door and I cut out two "portholes". The portholes I cover with blue clear wrap. The students make fish and kelp which I hang around the outside of the box. We are now "under the ocean". Ocean Mural We began on the beach and added to it as we learned about each part of the ocean. Learn ALL About Oceans Ocean Floor WebQuest Something to be Crabby About WebQuest Swimmy and the Deep Blue Sea WebQuest ... Fish Scramble MY UNIT In order to cover as much as possible I begin my ocean unit by reviewing the water cycle and letting them know that the water sheds lead to the oceans. We study about the shore , including estuaries, tide pools and sandy beaches. Then we advance to the first level of the ocean continental shelf and then the continental slope and end up in the deep end of the ocean.

51. People & The Planet > Coasts And Oceans > Overview > Ocean Planet In Decline
pollution that virtually no marine life can survive. reasons relating to the ecologicalvalue of oceans. square foot just for their shore protection functions
http://www.peopleandplanet.net/section.php?section=6

52. Patp > Coasts And Oceans > Glossary
a coast, works there, makes a living from the sea or related nearshore areas –are ENSO events have impacts on fisheries, bird life and mainland weather.
http://www.peopleandplanet.net/section.php?section=6&topic=8

53. Lesson Plans - Xpeditions @ Nationalgeographic.com
think about how photography can help save the oceans. different layers of the oceanthe shore and tide help give students an introduction to life in various
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/lessons/18/gk2/doubiletocean.html
Check out:
X18: Uplink Outpost

Standard #18:
How to Apply Geography to Interpret the Present and Plan for the Future
History Through Headlines
...
Take Action! Steward Our Land

Into the Ocean "Adopt" a Geographic News Story Echoes: What Animals Can Teach Scientists Geography Skills and Your Town Your Changing Town Complete Index Into the Ocean Overview: Students are familiar with fish and perhaps some other underwater animals, but have they ever thought about where in the ocean these animals live? In this lesson, students will be encouraged to learn more about the special adaptations of animals with which they are already familiar. It will introduce students to different ocean depths and to the ways in which animals have adapted to live at different depths. In the process, they will look at the photographs of David Doubilet and think about how photography can help save the oceans. [NOTE: To prepare for this lesson, have the following done before starting: Tear off a 6-foot (approximately 2-meter) sheet of poster paper. Holding the paper vertically, draw backgrounds for three different layers of the ocean: the shore and tide pools, the open ocean, and the abyss or deep sea. (If you have time, make this a class project.) When you are finished drawing, tape the page to a classroom wall. These are simplified classifications of the ocean's depths, but will help give students an introduction to life in various parts of the ocean.] Connections to the Curriculum: Geography, earth science

54. AMSA Environment Education
oceans were seen as vast domains in which garbage became invisible natural materialto reduce the potential for entanglement of marine life. shore Facilities.
http://www.amsa.gov.au/ME/POLLUT/Stowit.asp
Home About AMSA Search and Rescue The Shipping Industry ... Search General Information
Classroom Projects

Save Our Seas Kids Posters

Major Oil Spills in Australia

How Australia responds to oil and chemical spills
...
Ship Pollution Regulations
(Acrobat Reader needed)
Liability for Oil Polution
(Acrobat Reader needed)
Stow it Don't Throw it
Garbage pollution from vessels
Boat users have traditionally dumped their garbage into the sea as a matter of course. Oceans were seen as vast domains in which garbage became invisible because it either decayed or sank. Today the situation is very different, mainly because we all use so many non-biodegradable products such as plastics. Once thrown into the sea, they are extremely persistent and potentially harmful to humans and marine life. The beauty of our coastlines and beaches is devalued as garbage accumulates. Beaches, often in remote places, are polluted by garbage washed up from the sea. Much of this garbage comes from ships, yachts, trawlers and other marine craft. Garbage can be fatal for marine animals such as turtles and whales which mistake plastic bags for jellyfish - a source of food. Other plastic material can be mistaken as food and eaten by fish, seabirds and other marine life, causing death. Garbage also entangles seabirds, seals, turtles and fish, trapping and slowly choking them to death. Garbage can also be costly for recreational boaters and the fishing industry. Rope and plastic material may get caught in propeller shafts or block water intakes causing major damage, expensive repairs and loss of income while vessels are repaired.

55. JASON XIV: From Shore To Sea
comes from people dumping waste products into the oceans, and from are easy to seefrom the shore and from thetree How do ships effect underwater life in the
http://www.jasonproject.org/jason14/content_resources/chat_transcripts/airame_20
Host Researchers Guest Researchers Broadcast Co-Hosts Student Hosts ... Student Argos Chat with
Dr. Satie Airame Scientific Advisor

Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary
Event transcript: document.write(dateConvert("20030115")); thetree : What is the biggest threat to species in the Channel Islands satieairame : There are several threats to species in the Channel Islands. Pollution is one of the primary threats to plants and animals in the oceans. Pollution comes from people dumping waste products into the oceans, and from pesticides, oil, and other toxins that accumulate on land and are washed into the ocean during rains. Fishing is another threat to marine organisms. Many species are managed properly, but some, such as rockfish, are particularly vulnerable to overfishing and their numbers have declined. Fishery managers work with the Channel Islands National Martine Sanctuary staff to help protect the marine life in the Sanctuary. thetree : What species is the greatest focus in the Channel Islands? satieairame : Various species play important roles in the ecology of the Channel Islands. Giant kelp provides an important source of food and shelter for many other animals. Lobsters, sea urchins, and squid are important invertebrates in the regionsupporting some of the biggest fisheries. Rockfish are important to the ecology of the region and they also support a small commercial and recreational fishing industry. Marine mammals, such as blue whales, gray whales, and humpback whales, attract many tourists to the region. Finally, seabirds, including the California Brown Pelican, Snowy Plover, and Least Tern, are threatened, but still maintain breeding populations in the area.

56. JASON XIV: From Shore To Sea
jenncaselle Since we work very near shore, we use small college and other timesin my life such as and found his enthusiasm for protecting the oceans to be
http://www.jasonproject.org/jason14/content_resources/chat_transcripts/caselle_2
Host Researchers Guest Researchers Broadcast Co-Hosts Student Hosts ... Student Argos Chat with
Dr. Jenn Caselle Science Coordinator

Partnership for Interdisciplinary Studies of Coastal Oceans, University of California at Santa Barbara
Event transcript: document.write(dateConvert("20021008")); jfechris : Hello, and welcome to this chat with Jenn Caselle. Send in your questions and we will get started soon. jenncaselle : Hi, my name is Jenn Caselle, and I'm a Marine Ecologist at the University of Santa Barbara in California. My job is to run a large marine ecology project called PISCO. The PISCO project involves many researchers up and down the west coast who are all trying to understand the dynamics of near shore marine ecosystems. My interest is in fish population dynamics and fisheries. jenncaselle : You might have seen some of my work in the intertidal on the JASON project so far. I study communities that live in this habitat as well as the rocky kelp forest. So, much of my work is done scuba diving on reefs up and down the coast of California and the Channel Islands. rgunn : Why did you choose to be a marine biologist?

57. OCEANS AWAY
oceans away. to run my hand over it the sounds of it on the shore or in a and evenmore, the silence, believing its potential for wrath, shape, giver of life.
http://bbridge.www3.50megs.com/oceansaway.htm
Free web page hosting :: 50megs.com
oceans away In the middle of the North American continent I walk over the Iowa River and think of the sea, more than a thousand miles away. For years, everyday, every time, I take this two-hundred yard journey, twenty feet above the moving river, I am reminded of the ocean, the Atlantic, that surrounded my island home. Water. The river's colors are different - dirty greens and browns compared with the full spectrums of blue and black in the sea. The shades are more subtle, more dominated by the land and the season, than the sky. There are no unfathomable depths or horizons that reach beyond belief. The river is finite, more calm than complex. Its life is controlled by shores and transparent shallows. Small waves spit angry foam, wanting more room to grow, unable to join the unchecked wind across the great plains. Water. It has a universality unequaled by anything on earth. It swells in this small piece of river just as it does in the sea. Ripples resonate in exactly the same patterns on its every surface. It plays clever games with light and pretends to move with the wind. Its every surface covers a single spirit. The land in the mid-west is so big they call it a sea. It dominates here, limiting the water, directing and subduing it, but there is no compromising of its purpose. The land is anchored, patient, strong, sacrificing the breath of movement for stability. Yet the water plays upon it, eats it up and throws it out, penetrating from above and below without effort. It is the water that decides the boundaries, the limits of the land. It is water that has and will survive forever with its constant change, its ability to adapt, never exact but always meticulous. Ever moving and enduring with ancient strength.

58. New Oceans Welcome
You cannot discover new oceans unless you have the courage to turn away fromthe shore Ideal You Ideal Worlds. NLPFOR-life NLP-IN-EDUCATION. NLP-AT-WORK.
http://www.new-oceans.co.uk/new/nowel.htm
Thoughts For The Month
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the ANLP Conference in April
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59. SEA SHELL GAME #29
9. Girls dance on the beach, To entertain the young boys, To oceans of music. uponreflection is hard to imagine – that there is more life on shore than in
http://www.ahapoetry.com/Ssgam29.htm
SEA SHELL GAME # 29
Judged by Jane Reichhold
April 8, 2000 ROUND ONE
bright summer morning
young cat soundlessly stalking
swaying blade of grass In and out
the unintentional pattern
a breath of life Ku #1 wins because it is composed of concrete images. String of trees fallen
Into the bowl of the valley
A broken necklace Soothing vibration
Releasing the soul the spirit
Free of vocal bars Again, ku #3 wins because it contains images of the physical world. Under the summer moon tapping lightly in the breeze - forgotten papers Trees dipped in crystal Diamond-scattered wind Winter's fragile jewels. Ah, now these are better matched – both are filled with the physical world. I would pick ku# 5 as winner because it combines dissonant images in a simple but effective way. Computer Screen's Glare Etching print across our minds Storing Memory Engulfed in peacefulness, nothing seems to break the calming sound, of mother nature basking in her glory. Ku # 8 seems to achieve the singular honor of being totally abstract – an absolute no-no in haiku. Ku #7 wins easily. Girls dance on the beach

60. The View Ahead
These direct connections between the oceans and human life are a central focus ofBigelow Laboratory's research. The Laboratory is located on the shore of the
http://www.bigelow.org/brochure/view.html
Introduction Phytoplankton Counting in Midstream Learning Together ... Ocean Knowledge "Nothing in the sea falls haphazard; if we cannot predict, it is because we do not know the cause, or how the cause works..." Henry Bryant Bigelow, 1929 Report to the National Academy of Sciences The scientific community of researchers at Bigelow Laboratory epitomizes the commitment to exploration and inquiry that Henry Bryant Bigelow first articulated in his 1929 report about the importance of scientific investigation of the oceans. Since 1974, Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences has been actively pursuing the scientific journey that began in the oceans more than a hundred years ago. Now, on the verge of a new century, understanding the natural processes that take place in the world's oceans has become more essential to our society and our planet than at any previous time in our history. The oceans cover over seventy percent of our planet's surface, and have a critical impact on the familiar terrestrial environment we inhabit. In addition to providing the only source of protein for nearly a billion people and employment for millions of individuals, the oceans regulate the composition of our atmosphere and help stabilize climate by moderating extreme changes in temperature on the planet's surface. Human population is growing faster in coastal areas than anywhere else; projections show that in twenty-five years almost seventy-five percent of the people in the United States will live in coastal areas, putting enormous pressure on near-shore marine ecosystems as a result of development and pollution. It is estimated that 3,600 people in the United States relocate to the coast every day. Currently, half of the five and a half billion people in the world live within fifty miles (80km) of an ocean.

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