Thursday, October 22, 2009

Is the nature trail important??

The nature trail is important to the community because it allows us to take a look at nature with out wrecking plants or any homes of animals. If there wasn't a trail people would probably walk over plants smashing them and ruining the homes of animals and also maybe food that an animal eats. The trail allows us to observe and study without disturbing the habitat to much. We should use the trail for this reason and maybe also as community get together, but we first need to clean the trail up so people can walk through and not be disgusted.

15 things i saw

On our trip to the nature trail i saw a variety of things and learned many things too. When we first walk in there you think just trees and weeds, but thats not the case you see a habitat and how plants trees and animals live together in there own little ecosystem. i saw many trees such as birch, maple, oak, and even a "box-cutter". In addition i also saw poison ivy, wild roses, along with many other plants. We saw a pond or some sort of water with duckweed on it. we saw an old fence line and many dead treas with decomposer's such as mushrooms and the stink bomb things. we saw pokeweed, vines, and many other plants. Animals i saw were box elder bugs, a chipmunk, a squirrel, and birds. i saw a variety of things on this trip a variety of which i don't even know, but those are all things that make a habitat functional

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

climate related

Smog and poor air quality is a pressing environmental problem, particularly for large metropolitan cities. Smog, the primary constituent of which is ground level ozone, is formed by a chemical reaction of carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, volatile organic compounds, and heat from sunlight.


The Impact of Rising Sea Levels
According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, made up of leading climate scientists, sea levels have risen some 3.1 millimeters per year since 1993. And the United Nations Environment Program predicts that, by 2010, some 80 percent of people will live within 62 miles of the coast, with about 40 percent living within 37 miles of a coastline.

The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) reports that low-lying island nations, especially in equatorial regions, have been hardest hit by this phenomenon, and some are threatened with total disappearance. Rising seas have already swallowed up two uninhabited islands in the Central Pacific. On Samoa, thousands of residents have moved to higher ground as shorelines have retreated by as much as 160 feet. And islanders on Tuvalu are scrambling to find new homes as salt water intrusion has made their groundwater undrinkable while increasingly strong hurricanes and ocean swells have devastated shoreline structures.


those are some climate related issues.

Monday, October 5, 2009

reflect

Justin's and my project on alternative energy overall i think went good. We could have been a little more descriptive on the project in what we were comparing, and also our formatting could have been better. I say we did i good job and with a few corrections we could present to people around the district.