View allAll Photos Tagged EnvironmentalScience
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Sum 41 All Killer No Filler (Full Album) youtu.be/WcNDKxTbOks
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Canon EOS 40D
Plant Facilities Utilities Manager Everett Wickline took on the role of educator as he explained all that is involved with waster water treatment at the NMH settlement ponds, to students in Becca Malloy's AP Environmental Science class on November 8, 2018. Photography by Glenn Minshall.
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In 2009, UMCES launched a state-of-the-art research vessel Rachel Carson specifically designed to help understand and monitor the health of the Chesapeake Bay and its rivers.
Attribution: University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science/Cheryl Nemazie
This photo was taken on April 22nd at the Hidden Lakes Forest Preserve located in Bolingbrook, IL. As you can see from the photo, there are many trees that are knocked down and this is a result of logging. Logging is the result of people cutting down trees either due to deforestation, for an aesthetic look, or to use the wood elsewhere. Removing trees from the woods have made it easier for people to walk inside the woods and may have been cut due to aesthetic reasons. The trees that have been brought down still lye on the ground and have not been picked up. In this ecosystem, they are bringing down diversity of the animals that lived in those trees prior and other animals are now using the newly cut down trees instead. Animals can now find cover behind and under the tree logs that have been knocked down, but the same species that used those trees before may need to find a new place to relocate to. These animals would include birds that have made their homes in those trees and now have lost their home. The new species using this area could be rabbits and snakes that may take shelter under the tree or within the tree. I would not have park officials remove the trees because that would alter the habitat of new species that now use these trees. Instead, I would recommend that deforestation should be stopped in this area as a solution.
UMCES has been the pacesetter of scientific research on the Chesapeake Bay. When Maryland first faced the disappearance of seagrasses in the 1970s, it was our scientists that first demonstrated nutrient overenrichment was the primary cause. We then worked hand-in-hand with the State of Maryland to develop a science-based blueprint for restoring the environmental and economic vitality of the Chesapeake Bay.
Pictured: Carlos Lozano and Dave Secor
Attribution: University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science/Amy Pelsinsky
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"John Mac Giolla Phádraig Leisen"
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Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my
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Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. Please respect "My Copyright ©2014" - All rights reserved.
Above-ground facilities for the construction of the Channel Tunnel near Dover, Kent.
Taken during Keele University undergraduate geology student field trip, summer 1988.
Photo taken by:Simon Haslett
Database ref: 0973
Mongolian herders use motorcycles to herd horses across deep waters.
Employer: Academy of Natural Sciences
Major: Environmental Sciences
Qualtrics ID: 76.99.49.191
Warren Haynes "I'd Rather Go Blind" Gov't Mule (Etta James Cover) youtu.be/iYgId1baqWg
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Nothing fancy here. Just some cell phone pictures of the Environmental Science class I co-teach disecting some owl pellets. They will eventually reconstruct the mouse skeletons.
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Dr. Donald Boesch, president of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, has been a trusted advisor on the science of the Chesapeake Bay for four Maryland governors, most recently serving on BayStat and the Maryland Climate Change Commission. He has a more than 40-year career in research on coastal ecosystems in the Chesapeake Bay region, focusing In particular on human impacts on these ecosystems, including dead zones and wetland loss, and what can be done to reverse the degradation.
Attribution: University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science/Cheryl Nemazie
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