-
- Link
- https://www.bl.uk/voices-of-science
- Category
- Science and Technology
- Subject
- Computing, Engineering, General Science, Geography, Geology, Physics
- Medium
- Radio/Sound
- Type of resource
- Streaming/Download, Web Links
This is the website of the Oral History of British Science programme. At the heart of the project are 100 interviews with British scientists about environmental science, British technology and engineering from 1940 to the present. The home page provides a good introduction to the project: it features short audio and video clips, with transcripts, of scientists and engineers talking about their lives and careers.
Users can search by themes (including education and lab work, and also by scientific discipline. The site also includes links to articles and papers written by members of the project team.
-
- Link
- https://www.antarctica.ac.uk/images/video/index.php
- Subject
- General Science, Geography, Geology, Nature
- Medium
- Film/Video, Radio/Sound
- Type of resource
- Streaming/Download
This section of the British Antarctic Survey website features a selection of video clips and streamed recordings of interviews from the oral history project. The video clips show wildlife, including whales, penguins, and marine life, scenery and geological features, (such as ice shelves and icebergs), Antarctic transport, data visualisations, as well as a seleection of clips withe scientists and geologists talking about their work and research.
Other Online Moving image Audio
-
- Link
- https://www.geolsoc.org.uk/Plate-Tectonics
- Subject
- Geology
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Streaming/Download
The Geological Society have created this useful resource, which is aimed principally at UK science and geography students aged 14-16 (Key Stage 4), and their teachers but it may of interest to others too. The home page is a world map, through which users can view the Earth’s tectonic plates, different types of plate boundary, and the distribution of volcanoes and earthquakes. The site features a nice mixture of videos, maps and animations, with clear explanations of concepts and processes, and a quiz, glossary and Teachers’ Zone.
Other Online Moving image
-
- Link
- http://www.geoset.info/
- Category
- Bio-Medical, Science and Technology
- Subject
- Archaeology, Art, Astronomy, Biology, Chemistry, Computing, Engineering, Ethnology, General Science, Geology, Mathematics, Physics, Psychology, Social Studies, Technology
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Streaming/Download, Web Links
GEOSET (Global Educational Outreach for Science, Engineering and Technology) is a freely accessible, searchable internet gateway to a selection of SET and related educational materials. Most of the videos take the form of ‘concept modules’ - rather than whole lectures or courses - focused on specific topics, in the form of split-screen presentations, in which the video of the presenter is in one window and the educational material synchronised and presented in a second window. GEOSET also links to other major sources of educational material such as at the Vega archive site and the Royal Society. Users can filter by age suitability, type of video, and subject.
Other Online Moving image
-
- Link
- http://www.palaeocast.com/
- Subject
- Biology, Botany, Geology
- Type of resource
- Podcasting, Streaming/Download
This excellent series of free podcasts explores all aspects of fossils and the evolution of life on earth. Each podcast is around an hour long and features contributions from specialists and academics, who discuss a particular aspect of palaeontology, from mass extinctions to the The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event. Each episode is extensively illustrated with still images, charts, maps and diagrams. Users can search for topics by keyword or narrow their search by geological period.
Other Online
-
- Link
- https://www.3d-fossils.ac.uk/
- Category
- Science and Technology
- Subject
- Biology, Geology, Nature
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Archives/Museums, Databases, Streaming/Download, Web Links
This website - the world’s first virtual 3D fossil collection - is the result of a project led by the British Geological Survey. The database, which is still being populated, aims ultimately to hold records of all macrofossil species and subspecies found in the UK, including links to high resolution 2D photographs, stereo (anaglyph) photographs and a selection of 3D digital models, many of which can be reproduced by 3D printers. Freely available and aimed at researchers, university and school students as well as amateur geologists, the database collects information about invertebrates, bivalves, corals and plants, with plans to expand in the future to dinosaur bones and skeletons. Detailed metadata for each record, including locality, age, taxonomic identification and registration number, means that highly refined searches are possible. A selection of free software packages for viewing and manipulating 3D images can be downloaded here.
Other Online Moving image
-
- Link
- https://nctr.pmel.noaa.gov/
- Category
- Science and Technology
- Subject
- General Science, Geography, Geology, Physics
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Organisations, Streaming/Download, Web Links
This organisation, based at the Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (PMEL) in Seattle, undertakes research to devise faster, more accurate ways of forecasting tsunamis, predict the effect of their impact on coastal communities and develop detection technology. Their website features a number of model animations of actual and simulated tsunami events. There is also a link to a YouTube and teaching videos and other educational resources.
Other Online Moving image
-
- Link
- https://www.thirteen.org/wnet/savageearth/animations/index.html
- Category
- Science and Technology
- Subject
- Geography, Geology
- Type of resource
- Producers/Broadcasters, Streaming/Download
These animations supplement the PBS Savage Earth television series, which was first broadcast in 1998 and tells the story of natural disasters. A series of flash animations, which are accompanied by explanatory text, show, in a step by step way, the action behind earthquakes, volcanoes and tsunamis, while articles on the website explain the science of the phenomena. There are also links to other web resources, from general geophysics sites to resources specific to tsunamis, earthquakes and volcanoes.
Other Online
-
- Link
- https://www.ruralmedia.co.uk/
- Category
- Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences
- Subject
- Agriculture, Archaeology, Development Studies, Environmental Studies, Ethnology, Geography, Geology, Nature, Social Studies, Social Welfare
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Organisations
Based in the West Midlands, this charity aims to enable rural and disadvantaged communities to participate in creative media activities and, in their own words, ‘create high quality film, photography, web, and print resources, that reflect diverse rural communities and issues, and challenge stereotypes and prejudice.' The website provides access to many of their films (click here) as well as detailed information on their diverse activites aimed at engaging with young people and local communities. They also run media skills courses specifically aimed at the Gypsy, Roma and Traveller communities as part of a Big Lottery-funded scheme.
Other Online Moving image
-
- Link
- http://eps.berkeley.edu/~saekow/chronozoom/
- Category
- Science and Technology
- Subject
- Archaeology, Astronomy, Biology, General Science, Geology, History, Physics, Technology
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Streaming/Download
ChronoZoom is an open source, community collaboration between UC Berkeley, Moscow State University, and Microsoft Research that aims to cover - literally - life, the universe and everything, from the Big Bang to the present day. Visually stunning, if potentially overwhelming, Chronozoom works dynamically, based as it is on zoomable interactive timelines, to create a visual sense of the immensity of time - 13.7 billion years of "big history" - in a way that would be impossible in a static timeline. Still in its early stages at present, the site is limited to timelines and exhibits, but as geologist Walter Alvarez explains in the introductory video, further content will be developed in the future. Given the project’s ambitions, it is unsurprising that navigating the site can prove initially somewhat disorienting, but patient users will be rewarded with a powerful sense of the true scale of time over cosmic, geological, biological and social periods.
Other Online Moving image