Audio/Video Programs
Below are links to online audio (
)
and video (
) programs dealing with topics we touch
on during the course of the semester. These are provided to give you a broader
perspective on important issues that confront our society. As you can see
below, many of the links are to segments of programs broadcast on National
Public Radio (NPR). NPR is a great source of news information about our
environment.
Some programs require special audio software to use them. If you do not have
the required player, choose the appropriate link below:
Quicktime Player |
Windows
Media Player |
Real
Player
Programs are arranged
by "sphere":
The Atmosphere
-
"Effects
of Global Warming in Antarctica" - Morning Edition (NPR)
segment Sept. 14, 1998 reports on the studies of global warming and it's
potential effect on the Antarctic ice sheet.
-
"El
Nino" - Talk of the Nation - Science Friday
(NPR) segment from Feb. 24, 19978reports on the El Nino and it affect of
global weather patterns. 
- "Global Warming"
- Talk of the Nation - Science Friday
(NPR) segment from Jan 12, 1996
discusses the evidence for global warming and impact on life.

- "Global
Warming Threat" - All Things Considered (NPR) segment
from August 28, 1997 reports on the threat of altering ocean circulation by global
warming.

- "Hurricanes
and Global Warming" - All Things Considered (NPR)
reports on a study of how hurricanes draw carbon dioxide out of the ocean.
(3:45)

- "Influencing
the weather" - Morning Edition (NPR) segment from
August 6, 1998 reports on how humans influence weather.

- "Numbers of
Tornadoes" - All Things Considered (NPR) segment from
April 17, 1998 relating tornadic activity to El Nino. (2:30)

- "Ozone
Layer" - All Things Considered (NPR) segment from May
2000 about the ozone hole over the Arctic.

- "The
Perfect Storm" NOAA broadcast (June 29, 2000) looks at
the actual "perfect storm" that spawned the book and movie.

- "Tracking Tornadoes" - Talk of the Nation - Science Friday
(NPR) segment from May 24, 1996 explores the birth and evolution of
tornadoes with storm chasers from the National Severe Storms Lab in Norman,
OK

- "Tornado
Science" - All Things Considered (NPR) segment from May
4, 1999 explores why the midwest is a magnet for tornadoes. (4:00)

- "What's
Weather" - Morning Edition (NPR) Commentator Joel
Achenbach explains the difference between weather and climate. (3:38)

The Hydrosphere
- "Global
Warming" - All Things Considered (NPR) segment from
Sept. 7, 2000 reports on a study of freeze and ice breakup on lakes from
Wisconsin to Japan. Evidence indicates that later freezing and earlier thaw
may be linked to global warming. (3:30)

- "Hydrology
and Flooding" - All Things Considered (NPR) segment
from March 16, 1998 reports on how hydrologists predict flooding. (4:45)

- "Three
Gorges" All Things Considered segment from Dec. 17, 1997
about the construction of the Three Gorges Dam and its impact on the
environment. (8:30)

- "Warming the
Yellow River" - Morning Edition (NPR) segment
from Dec. 10, 1997 reports on how global warming is affecting the Yellow
River in China. (4:22)

The Biosphere
- "Biodiversity
in Madagascar" - Morning Edition (NPR) segment from
April 8, 1996 reports on the threat that disappearing forests poses to the
island extraordinary biodiversity. (7:15)

- "Costa Rica"
- Morning Edition (NPR) segment from Oct. 28, 1997 discusses the
impact of deforestation on soil erosion and its impact on nearby rivers and
the environment (8:45)

- "Drugs
and Bugs" - Weekend All Things Considered (NPR) segment
from July 23, 2000 interviews ethnobotanist Mark Plotkin about his South
American rainforest research into the healing secrets of the natural world.
(6:30)

- "Dead Zones" -
Weekend All Things Considered (NPR)
Aug. 7, 1999 reports on the natural and human causes of ocean "dead
zones". (4:40)

- "Global
Warming" - All Things Considered (NPR) segment from June
24, 1999 reports on the impact of global warming to spur plant grow and
insect populations in the past. (3:30)

- "Hawaii
Extinction" - All Things Considered (NPR) segment from
March 21, 2000 reports on how Hawaii's geographical isolation make's its
native organisms especially vulnerable to extinction by alien plant and
animal introductions. (12:30)

- "Humpback
Whales" - Morning Edition (NPR) report on efforts to learn
more about humpback whales of the Hawaiian Islands National Marine
Sanctuary.(8:44)

- "Illegal
Wildlife Products" - All Things Considered (NPR) from a
segment broadcast on March 11, 1998 reports on a facility full of products
illegally made from endangered species or items made out of regular species
that were illegally imported. (4:54)

- "Elephant
Poaching on the Rise" - Morning Edition (NPR) segment from Jan. 17,
2000 reports on the rise of elephant poaching as a result of the lifting of
the ban on ivory sale for a few African countries. (5:20)

- "The Last American Rainforest" -
Morning Edition (NPR) segment from Oct. 22, 1998 reports on the
last great temperate rainforest in America, Alaska's Tsongass National
Forest. (8:36)

- "Melting
Tundra" - All Things Considered (NPR) segment from Jan. 9,
1998 warns of the impact of global warming on melting the frozen soil of the
tundra thus accelerating decomposition and release of carbon into the
atmosphere. (5:00)

The Lithosphere
- "20th
Anniversary of Mount St. Helens Anniversary" - Talk of the
Nation - Science Friday (NPR) segment from May 19, 2000 takes a look
back at the famous eruption and what scientists have learned since.

- "Herculaneum"
- All Things Considered (NPR) segment from October 21, 1997
reports on the rediscovery of one of the world's oldest libraries, the Villa
of Papyrus, that was buried in the 79 A.D. eruption of Mt. Vesuvius . (8:00)

- "Tidal
Wave Warning for America" BBC News - news segment about the
potential for a huge tsunami formed off the Canary Islands that could devastate
the eastern seaboard.

- "Volcanoes"
- Talk of the Nation - Science Friday (NPR) segment from August
2, 1996 explores how and where volcanoes form and how to predict eruptions
with geologists from the Cascade Volcano Observatory and others.

- "Volcanoes"
- Talk of the Nation - Science Friday (NPR) segment from December
26, 1997 explores the hazards that active volcanoes like Mt. Lassen, Rainer,
and Kilauea pose to humans.
