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Exploratorium | Evidence | How Do We Know What We Know? | Human Origins
For most of us, science arrives in our lives packaged neatly as fact. But how did it get that way?
Science is an active process of observation and investigation. Evidence: How Do We Know What We Know? examines that process, revealing the ways in which ideas and information become knowledge and understanding." -
iPhone the Body Electric
"University of Utah researchers created new iPhone programs - known as applications or "apps" - to help scientists, students, doctors and patients study the human body, evaluate medical problems and analyze other three-dimensional images."
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Prehistoric Time Line: National Geographic
"Humans have walked the Earth for 190,000 years, a mere blip in Earth's 4.5-billion-year history. A lot has happened in that time. Earth formed and oxygen levels rose in the foundational years of the Precambrian. The productive Paleozoic era gave rise to hard-shelled organisms, vertebrates, amphibians, and reptiles. Dinosaurs ruled the Earth in the mighty Mesozoic. And 64 million years after dinosaurs went extinct, modern humans emerged in the Cenozoic era. The planet has seen an incredible series of changes—discover them for yourself."
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Healthy heart
The CBHF site is packed full of exciting games, brilliant activities and interesting information. It's all about you and what you can do to keep your heart in tip top condition."
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ABC Catchment Detox
Play Catchment Detox to see if you successfully manage a river catchment and create a sustainable and thriving economy.
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Google Earth: ICT in my Classroom
Using Google Earth, Google Docs and Twitter in this Afternoon’s Science Lesson.
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BioKIDS
Kids' Inquiry of Diverse Species - identifying, tracking and learning about animals in the ecosystem.
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Top 10 Modern Space Videos
Weightlessness, dark matter, and mind-blowing telescope images are great reasons to be excited about space exploration. Here are some of the best videos from our most recent decade of space travel.Wired Science from Wired.com
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SDSS SkyServer DR6
This website presents data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, a project to make a map of a large part of the universe. We would like to show you the beauty of the universe, and share with you our excitement as we build the largest map in the history of the world
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Interactive Rock Cycle Animation
This cutaway view of Earth shows where some common rock-forming processes occur. Embedded animations will illustrate the path of a rock moving through the rock cycle.
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Alison Hall's Public Lists (24)
- Animation and Games
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- Environment
- flickr tools
- Genealogy
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- interactive whiteboards
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