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The Science Carnival is sponsored by the CSU Channel Islands science departments under the leadership of Dr. Phil Hampton, Professor of Chemistry. This annual event first started in Fall 2009 with approximately 250 preschool through eighth (PK-8) grade students attending the event. Over 2200 PK-8 students and their families attended the 2016 Science Carnival.

Youngsters have a good opportunity to learn the concept 'momentum'.

Cartoons for a Science textbook I'm illustrating. The final version will be changed from this, but I still like this one. © Ian Sampson 2011

2016_4_30, kgronostajski@gmail.com, USA LBI NJ

taking a picture at work. friend's notes about ideas for future experiments (she is a super smart cancer researcher)

Washington DC, April 22, 2017. Despite the rainy weather tens of thousands marched to The Capitol after a rally at The Washington Monument. Like The Women's March and The Tax Day March, The March For Science demonstrates the resistance to and displeasure with President Donald Trump and Trumpism by people all over the world.

An Enviro Science boat crew taking part in a mussel relocation project on the Mississippi River at La Crosse, Wisconsin.

This pick was taken altering the in camera white balance. i'll credit Euan with the idea.

SciDev.Net on how to talk about your research in an engaging and accessible way

Monday 22 June 2015

Photo: Susan Allen/ Stockton University

Pacific Science Center includes six acres of hands-on science fun, two IMAX theaters, Tropical Butterfly House, Live Science Stage shows, Discovery Carts, Laser Dome and much more.

www.pacificsciencecenter.org

Not my favorite type book---but it works for my scavenger hunt of an oxymoron. Tonight I'm reading The Franchise Affair by Josephine Tey. written in 1948. Fun read so far. Got any other ideas for me?

Clark science students conducting research during summer 2011.

This is a movie poster from the science fiction movie Empire of Danger.

 

Official website Westfield Entertainment

www.westfieldentgrp.com/

Construction continues on the Powerhouse Science Center with some interior progress photos.

 

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Dreyfuss + Blackford Architecture’s design for the Powerhouse Science Center re-envisions a historic riverfront structure as a hub for science education, exploration and promotion in the City of Sacramento. On the banks of the Sacramento River, the Science Center grows out from an abandoned power station building. As a principal component of the Riverfront activation, the Powerhouse Science Center anchors Robert T. Matsui Waterfront Park and borders the southern terminus of the 32-mile American River Bike Trail.

 

Vacant for over half a century, the structure undergoes a complete historic rehabilitation and the construction of a new floor level inside. A new two-story addition projects from the east side, containing a lobby, classrooms, offices and a cafe. A 110-seat planetarium is prominently on display with a zinc-clad hemispheric dome rising above the building’s mass. As representation of our place in the universe, the facade and building mass is sectioned by multiple planes, creating continuous vector lines that extend across the building and site. From satellites to world landmarks, the lines form connections with local and global points of interest.

 

The original PG&E Power Station B was designed in 1912 in the Beaux Arts Style by architect Willis Polk and was formally closed in 1954. It is on the National Register of Historic Places, California Register of Historic Places and the Sacramento Register of Historic & Cultural Resources. The Powerhouse Science Center is designed to achieve a USGBC LEED Rating of Silver.

 

Photo by Otto Construction.

Photo Credit: Jill Jentes

2015_5_2, kgronostajski@gmail.com, USA LBI NJ

  

In and around the science department

Dreyfuss + Blackford Architecture’s design for the Powerhouse Science Center re-envisions a historic riverfront structure as a hub for science education, exploration and promotion in the City of Sacramento. On the banks of the Sacramento River, the Science Center grows out from an abandoned power station building. As a principal component of the Riverfront activation, the Powerhouse Science Center anchors Robert T. Matsui Waterfront Park and borders the southern terminus of the 32-mile American River Bike Trail.

 

Vacant for over half a century, the structure undergoes a complete historic rehabilitation and the construction of a new floor level inside. A new two-story addition projects from the east side, containing a lobby, classrooms, offices and a cafe. A 110-seat planetarium is prominently on display with a zinc-clad hemispheric dome rising above the building’s mass. As representation of our place in the universe, the facade and building mass is sectioned by multiple planes, creating continuous vector lines that extend across the building and site. From satellites to world landmarks, the lines form connections with local and global points of interest.

 

The original PG&E Power Station B was designed in 1912 in the Beaux Arts Style by architect Willis Polk and was formally closed in 1954. It is on the National Register of Historic Places, California Register of Historic Places and the Sacramento Register of Historic & Cultural Resources. The Powerhouse Science Center is designed to achieve a USGBC LEED Rating of Silver.

Dr. Patrick Wolf, M.D.

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Science

Has failed

Our world.

Science

Has failed our mother earth.

 

System Of A Down, "Science"

Song of the day

Construction continues on the Powerhouse Science Center with some interior progress photos.

 

---

Dreyfuss + Blackford Architecture’s design for the Powerhouse Science Center re-envisions a historic riverfront structure as a hub for science education, exploration and promotion in the City of Sacramento. On the banks of the Sacramento River, the Science Center grows out from an abandoned power station building. As a principal component of the Riverfront activation, the Powerhouse Science Center anchors Robert T. Matsui Waterfront Park and borders the southern terminus of the 32-mile American River Bike Trail.

 

Vacant for over half a century, the structure undergoes a complete historic rehabilitation and the construction of a new floor level inside. A new two-story addition projects from the east side, containing a lobby, classrooms, offices and a cafe. A 110-seat planetarium is prominently on display with a zinc-clad hemispheric dome rising above the building’s mass. As representation of our place in the universe, the facade and building mass is sectioned by multiple planes, creating continuous vector lines that extend across the building and site. From satellites to world landmarks, the lines form connections with local and global points of interest.

 

The original PG&E Power Station B was designed in 1912 in the Beaux Arts Style by architect Willis Polk and was formally closed in 1954. It is on the National Register of Historic Places, California Register of Historic Places and the Sacramento Register of Historic & Cultural Resources. The Powerhouse Science Center is designed to achieve a USGBC LEED Rating of Silver.

 

Photo by Otto Construction.

Photo Credit: Jill Jentes

SciDev.Net on how to talk about your research in an engaging and accessible way

Monday 22 June 2015

Photo Credit: Jill Jentes

SciDev.Net on how to talk about your research in an engaging and accessible way

Monday 22 June 2015

Clark College hosts local elementary schools to participate in science activities

Pacific Science Center includes six acres of hands-on science fun, two IMAX theaters, Tropical Butterfly House, Live Science Stage shows, Discovery Carts, Laser Dome and much more.

www.pacificsciencecenter.org

Interior of the Science Center. Photo taken by Jie Han '12.

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