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Headwaters Science
United States
Приєднався 30 вер 2018
Headwaters Science Institute is a Soda Springs based 501(c)(3) non-profit that brings science education to youth throughout California. Our mission is to foster curiosity through science. We design educational programs and camps both in and out of schools that teach the scientific method and inspire inquiry in our students. These programs are fully customizable to the needs of any teacher, school, or community. In an effort to complete the circle of learning, we also teach professional development workshops to educators, showing them how to implement our methods in their own teaching.
www.headwatersscienceinstitute.org
www.headwatersscienceinstitute.org
Headwaters Celebrates the End of 2024
Headwaters celebrates the end of 2024 and thanks you all for being a part of it! Here's to 2025 and even more science!
Переглядів: 49
Відео
Lunch With A Scientist: How Do Small Birds Survive Harsh Winters with Carrie Branch, Ph.D.
Переглядів 789 місяців тому
Dr. Carrie Branch is a researcher and assistant professor at the University of Western Ontario. Dr. Branch is fascinated by the great diversity of signals animals use to communicate and studies how the environment shapes this variation, specifically related to cognitive abilities and communication signals in birds. Dr. Branch teaches courses in Animal Behavior, Animal Communication, and Animal ...
Thank you for helping Headwaters change lives in 2023
Переглядів 59Рік тому
Thank you for helping Headwaters change lives in 2023
Headwaters Student Driven Research Part 3
Переглядів 67Рік тому
Headwaters Student Driven Research Part 3
Headwaters Student Driven Research Part 2
Переглядів 61Рік тому
Headwaters Student Driven Research Part 2
Expand your Science Background by Joining the Headwaters Research Experience
Переглядів 28Рік тому
Expand your Science Background by Joining the Headwaters Research Experience
Lunch with a Scientist featuring Dr. Elinor Martin
Переглядів 75Рік тому
Lunch with a Scientist featuring Dr. Elinor Martin
Headwaters Research Experience Student Spotlight
Переглядів 24Рік тому
Headwaters Research Experience Student Spotlight
Fostering Curiosity through Science Headwaters X OCEARCH Earth Day Special
Переглядів 82Рік тому
Fostering Curiosity through Science Headwaters X OCEARCH Earth Day Special
Studying marine-life reproduction with Dr. Giselle Montano | Lunch With A Scientist
Переглядів 97Рік тому
Studying marine-life reproduction with Dr. Giselle Montano | Lunch With A Scientist
Estudiando reproducción de la vida marina con Dr. Gisele Montano, Almuerzo con un científico
Переглядів 26Рік тому
Estudiando reproducción de la vida marina con Dr. Gisele Montano, Almuerzo con un científico
Join us for Big Day of Giving May 4, 2023
Переглядів 39Рік тому
Join us for Big Day of Giving May 4, 2023
Lunch with a Scientist featuring Dr. Raquel Silva
Переглядів 70Рік тому
Lunch with a Scientist featuring Dr. Raquel Silva
Lunch with a Scientist featuring Dr. Cynthia Corbitt
Переглядів 652 роки тому
Lunch with a Scientist featuring Dr. Cynthia Corbitt
Meet Sean Westley: Headwaters Research Experience Mentor
Переглядів 1752 роки тому
Meet Sean Westley: Headwaters Research Experience Mentor
Lunch with a Scientist featuring Dr. Seth Frisbie
Переглядів 1582 роки тому
Lunch with a Scientist featuring Dr. Seth Frisbie
Manatee Conservation with Jacksonville Zoo
Переглядів 1842 роки тому
Manatee Conservation with Jacksonville Zoo
Lunch with a Scientist Teacher Testimony
Переглядів 92 роки тому
Lunch with a Scientist Teacher Testimony
THANK YOU for supporting Headwaters in 2022
Переглядів 1212 роки тому
THANK YOU for supporting Headwaters in 2022
Lunch with a Scientist featuring Marine Biologist, Dr. Anya Brown
Переглядів 822 роки тому
Lunch with a Scientist featuring Marine Biologist, Dr. Anya Brown
Studying Climate Change and Mangroves with the UF Whitney Marine Lab
Переглядів 2552 роки тому
Studying Climate Change and Mangroves with the UF Whitney Marine Lab
Lunch with a Scientist: The Benefits of Beaver Dams in River Restoration with Jonathan and Erika
Переглядів 3262 роки тому
Lunch with a Scientist: The Benefits of Beaver Dams in River Restoration with Jonathan and Erika
Lunch with a Scientist featuring Dr. Tonya Shearer, Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation
Переглядів 852 роки тому
Lunch with a Scientist featuring Dr. Tonya Shearer, Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation
Estudiando reproducción de la vida marina con Dr. Gisele Montano, Almuerzo con un científico
Переглядів 1342 роки тому
Estudiando reproducción de la vida marina con Dr. Gisele Montano, Almuerzo con un científico
Cute!!!! Loved it
no doubt i believe the polynesian expansion is bigger thsn people think..
I am open to any questions, once again I am not a professor or a well educated person but if it is history you seek then I am about as close as you can get to finding alot of the missing pieces our people have lost.
All polynesians come from Samoa. The countries bordering the pacific ocean merged or were overthrown by the polynesians. This idea that we come from Taiwan is false. The build is very different in terms of genetics. Maori are from tonga, tongans are Samoans who overthrew the melanesians that occupied the island of Tonga first. So tongans are essentially a new race of polynesian, Maori are an extension of that. The Tongans are what I would consider the war mongering polynesians as it is known that Noone wished to leave Samoa unless you were banished or exiled. The chief, his clan or the common man and his family were banished from the island. This is how you end up with Hawaiians. Hawaii is Savaii. They are commoners and have no noble blood or link to royalty, like Tahiti etc. Only Samoa and eventually Tonga( Still commoners) have Royal titles. This is why Hawaii and Maori and other polynesian cultures only have a Ariki(Maori),Alii(Hawaii)= Ali'i in Samoa. Which is high chief. But Tu'i(King), is where you find royalty. Also, Samoa is the only culture to have a structured hierarchy and system. Tu'i(King),Ali'i(High chiefs),Tulafale(Orators),Taupou(Princess),Taule'ale'a(Servants). Maori and Hawaii only have Alii. Which further explains the banishment and exile. It is common for tongans especially those from the Ha'apai group which my mother is from to have a grandmother generations back that was a native american. This only seems to be woman. Not a native american man which says they took wives and brought them back. I am also half Samoan and there is no sign of a mix between native Americans and samoans. Proves only the tongans traveled the pacific. I put this down to one thing. The world has recorded in all cultures of a flood that almost wiped out everything. I feel the polynesians found ground in Samoa and have built and spread from there. The Ainu people in Japan from the Jomon are an example of a people located in the north that had dark skin and features like polynesians. They are mixed now with Asian and Caucasian but originally they were dark. They like us, have no written language and their oldest word for sun is La, like Ra in Maori, La in Samoa. If people look at Samoa as the center and everything spreads outward, because it does and accept that the pacific is a continent and is filled with millions, not thousands of people when all islands are taken into account. My samoan bloodline goes back to 850AD. So I am not a scientist but a keeper of my history and because of this it is polynesias history as a whole. If you are a polynesian. You are a samoan.
You realize that ant without a queen will perish within a few days. If you want to actually start and put keeping I recommend for you too watch novo ants, ofr ants Canada.
Why does this video has just 2.6K view?????? this is by far the best one on youtube .. even professional chefs don't hay such clarity
Great video, thank you!
This is a nice test, the information are good.
Do you have a book you can recommend that talks about riparian areas?
Hello from New Yorks Hudson Valley. Thank you for the video. I'm very interesting in diverse ecosystems. Have a great friday.
Living on the water may need to be something we end up doing logically overtime because that may be the only choice. Similar to cities made in desert areas, we may need to have places similar to New Orleans houseboats.
Do not listen to alltgamer you guys are doing awsome! 😊
Thank you.
Can microclimates exist under the canopy of a single tree?
First
I learned a lot from this video. Thank you, Dr. Samilo. Great job!
P r o m o s m 👊
Just why
I have been trying to figure out this problem of removing them too... And I have looked into using Beauveria bassiana as an answer too. However, I came to the conclusion that using this parasitizing fungi could easily cause more future problems, as well as killing all the beneficial insects which Beauveria bassiana will also attack & kill. It is a non-selective fungi. I did read that 'applying Beauveria bassiana, a nonselective biological insecticide should be considered, and NOT applied to flowers visited by pollinating insects.' While it attacks worms - ALL WORMS, it also attacks beetles, and caterpillars too. Some are not beneficial, BUT some ARE. There are other insect families it kills too. I was thinking about using the Beauveria bassiana in my yard, however, after looking into it further, I have decided NOT to go this route because I know my garden, my soil, it NEEDS the good bugs. So I'm not going to wipe out everything and leave my yard open to even more bag bugs, which I think is what would happen next, after all the stuff has died. I coukd write fir hours on the information I've found on jumping worms. But that would be too much for a comment. I just wanted to mention to those thinking about this option to consider it thoroughly before using it. There will be repercussions after you've eliminated all the good insects along with bad. Just sayin... This worm is a BIG problem, And Maybe if it sounds too easy, there's a reason? I wish I had a better answer. I don't. I'm still looking... Still thinking. Just look into it. That's all I'm saying.
Doc Frisbie was my favorite all-time professor. He does amazing work and has inspired so many of his former students to continue working on public health and the environment!
I live in the Bay Area where the recent storms and major floods happen. This was great insight into climate change, our reservior and how salinity affects our water and crops. Thank you for sharing!
'Promo sm' 😉
That's my cousin. She was always a smart kid. I used to babysit her, her brother & sister.... over 40 years ago. 😂
This informations are so useful ❤️
This people is mental they need queen
I did mine with my students . We had three set ups. One with salt and without salt placed under sun. And another two placed indoor. We observed green layer of bacteria and algae at the surface of the one without salt placed outdoor...but nothing of such in the one placed indoor. However,in the salt one outdoor,we saw a layer of reddish brown growth around the egg York region. What could the name of the salt loving bacteria? We need help.
Hi Hannah! Thanks for trying this out with your students. Our team is researching your question and will reply back with our findings asap. Thanks again!
In terms of actually making ant nests, try AntsAustralia or Ants Vienna.
For me those ants look like a Camponotus species so it’s better keeping them in wood rather than soil
Not all camponotus live in wood
I’m an ant keeper I buy or find queens and raise my own colony I recommend watching ants Canada or esthetic ants It is a pretty fun and rewarding hobby so try it out
Yeah that's true
your american
Way to go! Your content deserves a service like P r o m o S M!!!
they should check out ants Canada they will love it. And learn a lot. Let us in on their project.
Excellent research presentation by Sarah ! Enjoyed it!
Indeed! All of our students did a great job!
Sheeeeesh
Insane stuff my g
I agree
Yeah Goldenantproductions these people need a queen ant or the worker ants will die
Awesome work everyone! Excited to see so many enthusiastic young researchers.
Great job everyone! Love hearing about so much interesting work!
Nice presentation, Justin!
That looks like an invasive hopping worm
Hate those jumping worms, I hoped this video would show me how to rid my garden of them
@@IjeomaThePlantMama BotaniGuard works! It was just approved in my state, and I ordered it from Arbico Organics. BotaniGuard contains a bacteria, beauveria bassiana, that pokes holes in the buggers' stomachs. We were overwhelmed with the worms, and I was in utter despair. But I attended a ton of seminars by the scientific community and finally research is getting done. We now have options. The BotaniGuard is a bit tricky to use. You need to only use it at dusk/night when the pollinators have gone to sleep, and buy a sprayer to ensure it only goes into the ground. But it works! Last summer I would stick a trowel into the ground or pull a weed and tons and tons would come out of the ground. Now we see very few, and they're lethargic or dead.
I have a question! If i wanted to make a large-scale one using acrylic panels (a miniature version of the one at the exploratorium in SF) What does upkeep look like? Would I need to be putting newspaper shreds and hardboiled eggs routinely?
Did you end up making it? Please report back
Thanks for this video 😊
thx I really needed this
I like the design but you need a queen I will make one my self
Thank you so much mam 😇
That was so interesting! You are a great teacher Justin.
There is cure for HSV 1&2 with herbal supplements I order from Dr Lucky, you all can email him; drluckyherbalcure@gmail.com
Amazed, we hear one frog during winter rains; 5 months after wildfire that tore thru my mountain community. Any tips for saving the few frogs we have left?
I missed the first part, but have viewed the presentation now. It's definitely a novel way of looking at a competitive advantage by cheatgrass.