Boletín de la Sociedad Chilena de Química
versión impresa ISSN 0366-1644
Bol. Soc. Chil. Quím. v.46 n.2 Concepción jun. 2001
doi: 10.4067/S0366-16442001000200008
PLAGUICIDAS ORGANOCLORADOS PERSISTENTES ENSEDIMENTOS DE TRES LAGOS COSTEROS Y UN LAGO ANDINODE CHILE CENTRALRICARDO BARRAL1*, KARLA POZO1, ROBERTO URRUTIA1, MARCO CISTERNAS1, PATRICIA PACHECO1, y S. FOCARDI2.
1Unidad de Sistemas Acuáticos, Centro de Ciencias Ambientales EULA-CHILE,Universidad de Concepción. Casilla 160-C, Concepción, Chile.2Departamento de Biología Ambiental, Universidad de Siena, Via delle Cerchia 3,Siena, 53100, Italia.(Recibido: Septiembre 10, 1999 - Aceptado: Enero 19, 2001)*A quien debe dirigirse la correspondencia e-mail: ricbarra@udec.cl
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
"L'endosulfan" 985FM looks at News on Pesticides
---UNDER DEVELOPMENT---
Here's a link:
http://www.985fm.ca/international/nouvelles/des-scientifiques-de-l-onu-appellent-a-l-interdict-39500.htmlHow can a student combine his or her knowledge of French with the study of science? A program such as the one above gives a good example. Students can use their languages to study various science topics. The above example speaks about a pesticide that affects the human nervous system. Students could read about that topic in their native languages or listen to radio or television programs. Then, students could return to class and share (in the common classroom language) what they have learned. Such discussions can improve science knowledge, build vocabulary and increase understanding of our global connectedness, the unity and diversity of life, and sustainability. Thus, a radio program on a current science topic can be a part of increasing science literacy.
Let's look at, " les polluants organiques persistants (POPs)," or, "Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)." (http://www.985fm.ca/international/nouvelles/des-scientifiques-de-l-onu-appellent-a-l-interdict-39500.html, Accessed 10-17-2010). What are persistent organic pollutants? Do your students know? Do they matter to them? Do they have anything to do with sustainability? How is the nervous system involved? Where can the students start?
One student has read the Canadian's post at 985FM.ca and brings the topic to class. Other students wonder about the topic. Students in the class speak English, Haitian Creole, French, Korean, Arabic, Spanish and a few other languages, among them Farsi, and Urdu. Can they read about this topic in their own languages? Let's see what we can find. Remind them that journal articles in a new-to-them field will have a lot of words they do not yet understand and they shouldn't worry about all the, "new," words (Source: Reach Reading^TM, J S Shipman).
One student looks for information in Spanish: "pesticidas orgánicos persistentes." The Spanish version of Wiki says,"Un Contaminante orgánico persistente (COPs) conocidos internacionalmente por sus siglas en inglés, POPs (Persistent Organic Pollutants) son un conjunto de compuestos orgánicos fabricado artificialmente por el hombre muy toxicos, que tiene un tiempo de persistencia en el ambiente muy largo. Al ser un compuesto artificial, las bacterias y demás organismos no pueden descomponerlo y degradarlos fácilmente. Muchos tienen efectos acumulativos, ya que se almacenan en los tejidos grasos fijándose en la cadena alimenticia y pueden tener efecto hormonales.," (Source http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contaminante_org%C3%A1nico_persistente ; Accessed October 20,2010) The Wiki post refers to the food chain, a topic frequently in the learning standards required for the class. This point comes out in the classroom discussion. A result is that the students start to understand that there is relevance to the material studied at school and the, "real world."
Another student decides to look for Spanish journal articles, with real laboratory reports that are peer-refereed by scientists in the authors' field, and finds this web site along the way: http://www2.ine.gob.mx/publicaciones/gacetas/422/convenio.html, an ecology website. Let's see what is discovered in the journal search, however, and explore the ecology site another day. Here's the information the student found on the site and brought in.
Source: http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?pid=S0366-16442001000200008&script=sci_arttext&tlng=en; Accessed October 20, 2010)
If we want to have global sustainability, we have to ensure the students and their families understand the topics. An exercise such as this, listening and reading on the topic in native language, then sharing in the classroom language, can help bring the needed knowledge, such as the information on, "POPS," to them. Happy listening and happy reading! Remember to encourage students: Solutions, peaceful ones, do exist to global problems, like pesticide pollution with POPS. One or many of them, even all of them, may provide the answers.
(c) 2010 J S Shipman
Friday, September 24, 2010
W3C announce workshop on Web privacy
W3C is pleased to announce a Workshop on Internet Privacy: How can Technology help to improve Privacy on the Internet?, which takes place at MIT in Cambridge, MA (USA) on 8-9 December 2010. Who we are (e.g. our thoughts, dreams, feelings, DNA sequence), what we own (such as financial property), what we have experienced and how we behave (audio/visual/olfactory transcripts), and how we can be reached (location, endpoint identifiers) are among the most personal pieces of information about us. More and more of this information is being digitized and made available electronically. [Read More:http://www.w3.org/ ]
Here is a workshop well worth attending, if you are able to go.
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Say a student found a paper on, "Rotted Wood." What would you do?
"Look, teacher. I want to do my project on rotted wood. I like history and this paper has history."
So, here it is. The student found the paper, "Rotted wood - alga - fungus: the history and life of Prototaxites DAWSON 1859," by Francis M. Hueber.
There might be difficult vocabulary, however, the student interest in this topic will keep him or her motivated. So, what can the student do next and not get discouraged?
Well, a good start is to look at the complete reference and note that down in the project notebook. This helps a student avoid plagiarism and also saves time trying to retrieve references later.
Hueber, Francis M. 2001. Rotted wood - alga - fungus: the history and life of Prototaxites DAWSON 1859. Review of Paleobotany and Palynology. Elsevier. 116:123-158.
At this point, don't worry about the format. Just be sure that all the necessary information to cite is obtained. You can think about style and the citation format to use later. Students should learn, however, that the citation manual is not, "the way my teacher told me to do it." (Author's aside: I have seen so many students coming to college not having heard of style manuals. They come into class and want to do what their prior teacher said without knowing about style manuals.)
Skim the paper and look at the pictures, remembering, "No one knows all the words," (Beinetti, J., 1989. Personal communication). The Beinetti quote is a good one for students to remember to not get discouraged. Continue with the Reach ReadingTM technique. ( For info on this technique, contact me.)
Look at the parts of the paper:
Next, attack new vocabulary. Note that journal articles are special so, treat journals as precious. Don't write in them unless you own them. Use a photocopy to highlight any words not known. Remember, until you have read several journal articles in the same field, you may ave many new words. After reading about five articles, however, one starts to get a handle on the vocabulary.
Pause a moment and reflect. Did you (the student) know that there were plant fossils? Had you seen any before?
Let's look at the opening line in the abstract,"The Devonian flora discovered and collected by W. E. Logan in 1843 remained unstudied until 1855 at which time the collections were offered to J. W. Dawson." Hmmm!
"Devonian flora," a student might ask. Well, here's some information you can find on-line about the Devonian period:
http://www.historyforkids.org/scienceforkids/geology/eras/devonian.htm
Here is a sample of information you can find at this link.
Compare that to:
Another quote on plants in the Devonian is shown below:
Click here to link to a drawing of Devonian plants: http://universe-review.ca/I10-68-Devonian.jpg. Maybe the student would like to do his or her own drawing from verbal descriptions of the plants and then compare their idea(s) to the picture linked in this paragraph.
A student at Boston Latin School, Boston Latin Academy or other school studying classical languages migh like the sketch of club mosses and the Greek found here:
http://www.palaeos.com/Plants/Lycophytes/index.html.
Source: http://www.palaeos.com/Plants/Lycophytes/index.html. Accessed 9-21-2010.
Greek keyboard source: http://www.michael-robinett.com/language/greek/alphabet.htm. Accessed 9-21-2010.
A student might go to Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prototaxites. Here is a quote on Prototaxites with a chance for a student to make a difference...A citation is needed:
Let's look at another quote from Dr. Hueber's article:
Enigmatic...let's check a hard-cover dictionary or get an on-line definition. The student can do that already and should be encouraged to. If he or she hasn't been exposed to dictionary or computer use yet, however, it would be worth introducing them.
W. F. Logan: Here's a link to some information on him. http://ess.nrcan.gc.ca/esic/llf/collection_e.php. There one can find a short biography of anecdotes on Logan's life. You can enjoy that so much and feel like going in another direction (Stigmaria underlining every seam of coal leading to a new idea about where coal comes from). In fact, the student who likes history, from the beginning of this post, might enjoy taking that diversion and incorporating it into his or her project. But, to get back to Logan and the rotted-wood-alga-fungus story, I haven't found Logan's picture yet. Aha!
We haven't even got into the heart of Francis M. Hueber's article yet and already there are so many fascinating ideas to capture students' attention(s).
Let's look further. Try your hand at reading the article and we'll come back to it later. Note that we can also find related articles. For example, here is a quote from and a reference to a related article: "Since the first fossil of Prototaxites was described in 1859, researchers have hypothesized that these organisms were giant algae, fungi, or lichens. A recent study by Dr. Linda Graham and her colleagues published evidence in the February issue of the American Journal of Botany that they believe resolves this long-standing mystery," (Source: http://www.physorg.com/news185022458.html. Accessed 9-21-2010.) [See the original article at: http://www.amjbot.org/cgi/content/full/97/2/268: Structural, physiological, and stable carbon isotopic evidence that the enigmatic [emphasis Dr. J's]...
Graham et al. Am. J. Bot..2010; 97: 268-275 ] Can you guess what the organism is thought to be?
Science Literacy Comments: Elementary, middle and high school students benefit from the exposure to journal articles. College, university, including both undergraduate and graduate students, benefit from bridging up to the technical level of reading.
(c) 2010 J S Shipman. All rights reserved.
---to be continued---(in another post, on another day)
So, here it is. The student found the paper, "Rotted wood - alga - fungus: the history and life of Prototaxites DAWSON 1859," by Francis M. Hueber.
There might be difficult vocabulary, however, the student interest in this topic will keep him or her motivated. So, what can the student do next and not get discouraged?
Well, a good start is to look at the complete reference and note that down in the project notebook. This helps a student avoid plagiarism and also saves time trying to retrieve references later.
Hueber, Francis M. 2001. Rotted wood - alga - fungus: the history and life of Prototaxites DAWSON 1859. Review of Paleobotany and Palynology. Elsevier. 116:123-158.
At this point, don't worry about the format. Just be sure that all the necessary information to cite is obtained. You can think about style and the citation format to use later. Students should learn, however, that the citation manual is not, "the way my teacher told me to do it." (Author's aside: I have seen so many students coming to college not having heard of style manuals. They come into class and want to do what their prior teacher said without knowing about style manuals.)
Skim the paper and look at the pictures, remembering, "No one knows all the words," (Beinetti, J., 1989. Personal communication). The Beinetti quote is a good one for students to remember to not get discouraged. Continue with the Reach ReadingTM technique. ( For info on this technique, contact me.)
Look at the parts of the paper:
- Title,
- Author,
- Abstract,
- Introduction,
- Brief History
- Materials and Methods,
- Systematics,
- Descriptions,
- Ontogeny of the Sporophore,
- Discussion,
- Conclusion,
- Acknowledgements,
- References.
Next, attack new vocabulary. Note that journal articles are special so, treat journals as precious. Don't write in them unless you own them. Use a photocopy to highlight any words not known. Remember, until you have read several journal articles in the same field, you may ave many new words. After reading about five articles, however, one starts to get a handle on the vocabulary.
Pause a moment and reflect. Did you (the student) know that there were plant fossils? Had you seen any before?
Let's look at the opening line in the abstract,"The Devonian flora discovered and collected by W. E. Logan in 1843 remained unstudied until 1855 at which time the collections were offered to J. W. Dawson." Hmmm!
"Devonian flora," a student might ask. Well, here's some information you can find on-line about the Devonian period:
http://www.historyforkids.org/scienceforkids/geology/eras/devonian.htm
Here is a sample of information you can find at this link.
Near the end of the Devonian period (360 million years ago), some larger and more complicated plants evolved on land too. These were mainly ferns. Some giant ferns were as big as trees, so that a lot of the land now became covered with thick, tall forests of giant ferns and mosses, and even a kind of fungus that could grow eight feet tall. But the very beginnings of plants with seeds, and even flowering plants, were also getting started at the end of the Devonian period. The Devonian period, like the Cambrian and the Silurian, ended with a crisis that killed off most of the plants and animals that were on Earth at that time.Another online article discusses the Devonian period, giving more information. For example,
Source: http://www.historyforkids.org/scienceforkids/geology/eras/devonian.htm. Accessed 9-21-2010.
The Devonian Period of the Paleozoic Era lasted from 417 million years ago to 354 million years ago. It is named for Devon, England where the old red sandstone of the Devonian was first studied.
Source: http://www.fossils-facts-and-finds.com/devonian_period.html Accessed 9-21-2010.
Compare that to:
Devonian is named for England's Devonshire area where Devonian Outcrops are common. The Devonian follows the Silurian Period and precedes the Mississippian subperiod of the Carboniferous Period.A student might ask about, "Outcrops." What are they? How can he or she find out? A Google image search: http://www.google.com/images?q=outcropping%20Devonian&oe=utf-8&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a&um=1&ie=UTF-8&source=og&sa=N&hl=en&tab=wi&biw=1280&bih=611 Other ways?
Source: http://encyclopedia.kids.net.au/page/de/Devonian_period. Accessed 9-21-2010.
Another quote on plants in the Devonian is shown below:
During the Devonian Period, life on land became abundant and diversified. Plants that emerged during this time period included club mosses, horstails, ferns, mosses, and liverworts. Towards the end of the Devonian, the first amphibians evolved. The earliest known fossil amphibian is Ichthyostega, known by a specimen that was unearthed in eastern Greenland.
Source: http://animals.about.com/od/d/g/devonianperiod.htm. Accessed 9-21-2010.
Click here to link to a drawing of Devonian plants: http://universe-review.ca/I10-68-Devonian.jpg. Maybe the student would like to do his or her own drawing from verbal descriptions of the plants and then compare their idea(s) to the picture linked in this paragraph.
A student at Boston Latin School, Boston Latin Academy or other school studying classical languages migh like the sketch of club mosses and the Greek found here:
http://www.palaeos.com/Plants/Lycophytes/index.html.
Source: http://www.palaeos.com/Plants/Lycophytes/index.html. Accessed 9-21-2010.
Greek keyboard source: http://www.michael-robinett.com/language/greek/alphabet.htm. Accessed 9-21-2010.
A student might go to Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prototaxites. Here is a quote on Prototaxites with a chance for a student to make a difference...A citation is needed:
The genus Prototaxites (pronounced /ˌproʊtɵˈtæksɨtiːz/) describes terrestrial organisms known only from fossils dating from the Silu-Devonian, approximately 420 to 370 million years ago. Prototaxites formed large trunk-like structures up to 1 metre (3 ft) wide, reaching 8 metres (26 ft) in height,[1] made up of interwoven tubes just 50 micrometres (0.0020 in) in diameter. Whilst traditionally very difficult to assign to an extant group of organisms, current opinion is converging to a fungal placement for the genus. It might have had an algal symbiont, which would make it a lichen rather than a fungus in the strict sense.[citation needed]Note that the first cited article on the Wikipedia post is:
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prototaxites. Accessed: 9-1-2010.
1. ^ a b c d Boyce, K.C.; Hotton, C.L.; Fogel, M.L.; Cody, G.D.; Hazen, R.M.; Knoll, A.H.; Hueber, F.M. (May 2007). "Devonian landscape heterogeneity recorded by a giant fungus" (PDF). Geology 35 (5): 399–402. doi:10.1130/G23384A.1. http://geology.geoscienceworld.org/cgi/reprint/35/5/399.pdf.See the name, "Hueber, F. M.?" Are you familiar with that name from the first article discussed in he blog?
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prototaxites. Accessed: 9-1-2010.
Let's look at another quote from Dr. Hueber's article:
Among the fossil plants that were collected by W. E. Logan along the shores of Gaspe [I have to go find the accent for the e---Dr. J] Bay (1843), the most enigmatic specimen resembled a fragment of a small tree.A student might wonder about the meaning of, "enigmatic," and perhaps about what W.E. Logan looked like, and/or where is Gaspe Bay.
Source: Hueber, Francis M. 2001. Rotted wood - alga - fungus: the history and life of Prototaxites DAWSON 1859. Review of Paleobotany and Palynology. Elsevier. 116:123-158.
Enigmatic...let's check a hard-cover dictionary or get an on-line definition. The student can do that already and should be encouraged to. If he or she hasn't been exposed to dictionary or computer use yet, however, it would be worth introducing them.
W. F. Logan: Here's a link to some information on him. http://ess.nrcan.gc.ca/esic/llf/collection_e.php. There one can find a short biography of anecdotes on Logan's life. You can enjoy that so much and feel like going in another direction (Stigmaria underlining every seam of coal leading to a new idea about where coal comes from). In fact, the student who likes history, from the beginning of this post, might enjoy taking that diversion and incorporating it into his or her project. But, to get back to Logan and the rotted-wood-alga-fungus story, I haven't found Logan's picture yet. Aha!
http://gsc.nrcan.gc.ca/hist/logan/images/logan01.gif
We haven't even got into the heart of Francis M. Hueber's article yet and already there are so many fascinating ideas to capture students' attention(s).
Let's look further. Try your hand at reading the article and we'll come back to it later. Note that we can also find related articles. For example, here is a quote from and a reference to a related article: "Since the first fossil of Prototaxites was described in 1859, researchers have hypothesized that these organisms were giant algae, fungi, or lichens. A recent study by Dr. Linda Graham and her colleagues published evidence in the February issue of the American Journal of Botany that they believe resolves this long-standing mystery," (Source: http://www.physorg.com/news185022458.html. Accessed 9-21-2010.) [See the original article at: http://www.amjbot.org/cgi/content/full/97/2/268: Structural, physiological, and stable carbon isotopic evidence that the enigmatic [emphasis Dr. J's]...
Graham et al. Am. J. Bot..2010; 97: 268-275 ] Can you guess what the organism is thought to be?
Science Literacy Comments: Elementary, middle and high school students benefit from the exposure to journal articles. College, university, including both undergraduate and graduate students, benefit from bridging up to the technical level of reading.
(c) 2010 J S Shipman. All rights reserved.
---to be continued---(in another post, on another day)
Lab Exercise Link from Morrison Labs
Here's the link: http://morrisonlabs.com/index.html
Science Literacy Comments: Any time an educational program is from a company, evaluate it for bias.
Science Literacy Comments: Any time an educational program is from a company, evaluate it for bias.
Peace and Science
Here is a song about peace that you can listen to while you reflect on science and peace. More songs follow if you want to reflect longer.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4QglEbgON9o&feature=player_embedded
Scientists working in botany (including plant science, plant pathology, plant genetics, plant physiology, field botany, and so on) and agriculture help feed the world. Does feeding the world promote peace?
What about water production?
Energy production?
Why is it important to study science?
How can your science study promote peace?
Do you know the story of sugar production? Do you know one chemist saved so many people from burns during sugar production. You could be one person saving lives, too. Does saving lives promote peace?
How does war affect the environment?
Listen, enjoy, reflect. Peace be unto you, and you, and you...Peace to all of us. Where have all the flowers gone, anyway?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1y2SIIeqy34
Thanks, Pete.
Do we need to hear it again?
Thanks, Joan.
Peace is up to each of us. Use your science for peace. Sustainability takes peace.
and again?
Peter, Paul and Mary bring us more...
and..
Start swimming...The times are changing. We can bring peace. Sustainability takes peace.
(c) 2010 J S Shipman
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4QglEbgON9o&feature=player_embedded
Scientists working in botany (including plant science, plant pathology, plant genetics, plant physiology, field botany, and so on) and agriculture help feed the world. Does feeding the world promote peace?
What about water production?
Energy production?
Why is it important to study science?
How can your science study promote peace?
Do you know the story of sugar production? Do you know one chemist saved so many people from burns during sugar production. You could be one person saving lives, too. Does saving lives promote peace?
How does war affect the environment?
Listen, enjoy, reflect. Peace be unto you, and you, and you...Peace to all of us. Where have all the flowers gone, anyway?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1y2SIIeqy34
Thanks, Pete.
Do we need to hear it again?
Thanks, Joan.
Peace is up to each of us. Use your science for peace. Sustainability takes peace.
and again?
Peter, Paul and Mary bring us more...
and..
Start swimming...The times are changing. We can bring peace. Sustainability takes peace.
(c) 2010 J S Shipman
Friday, September 17, 2010
Today's In the News is on Hand-Washing...
Reflection... Comment on today's article (See the article in the left-hand column or quoted at the end of this post.)
Think about your hand-washing habits. Are you washing your hands more often? Do you know how antibacterial soaps and detergents create super germs?
Do you know plain old-fashioned bar soap kills some of the super germs better than the alcohol foam type cleaners? Did you go to the CDC Website?
Check out an earlier post on some related information: http://read-about-it.blogspot.com/2010/05/aseptique-technique-preventing-or.html
Here's a quote from that post:
(I quoted the news article here because it changes every day in the left-hand column.)
Think about your hand-washing habits. Are you washing your hands more often? Do you know how antibacterial soaps and detergents create super germs?
Do you know plain old-fashioned bar soap kills some of the super germs better than the alcohol foam type cleaners? Did you go to the CDC Website?
Check out an earlier post on some related information: http://read-about-it.blogspot.com/2010/05/aseptique-technique-preventing-or.html
Here's a quote from that post:
http://read-about-it.blogspot.com/2010/05/aseptique-technique-preventing-or.html
(I quoted the news article here because it changes every day in the left-hand column.)
In the News:
More Americans Washing Their Hands
Researchers who secretly spied on more than 6,000 adults using public restrooms in several major US cities say that more Americans are now washing their hands after using the bathroom. While combing their hair and pretending to apply makeup, these "spies" observed 85 percent of public restroom users washing their hands, an 8 percent increase from a 2007 survey and the highest recorded rate since these surveys began in 1996. Men lagged behind women, with 23 percent neglecting to wash their hands as compared to just 7 percent. More .
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