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Instructional Video2:12
Jam Campus

THE MESOPOTAMIA SONG (Parody of Rihanna - Disturbia)

6th - 8th
✌SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE VIDEOS: http://bit.ly/2F48qzK 📩 [FREE DOWNLOAD] 7 SECRETS OF MAKING YOUR OWN SONGS: http://eepurl.com/geN6WT 🎧 SEE OUR FULL SONG LIBRARY → New music videos added every week: https://www.jamcampus.com 🔥NEED A VIDEO...
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Instructional Video21:57
SWPictures

Helping Social Entrepreneurs - Water Management

12th - Higher Ed
In India, water management is a very big issue and one Social Entrepreneur is doing an amazing job of helping farmers to do this. In India, farmers struggle to grow their crops during the long dry months. The company, IDEI, tries to help...
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Instructional Video5:12
Curated Video

Paiute People Adapt Traditions to Modern-Day Gardens | Tending Nature | Season 2 | Episode 4

9th - 11th
A constant battle over water, including a major leak in a pipe owned by the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, inspired the Big Pine Paiute Tribe to revisit the irrigation traditions of their ancestors and connect them to modern...
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Instructional Video8:40
Curated Video

Why You Should Turn Your Lawn Into a Food Garden | One Small Step | NowThis

9th - 11th
Americans use roughly 7 billion gallons of water a day to irrigate lawns making lawns the single largest irrigated crop in the country. What if instead of well-kept grass, we used our time and resources to fill our lawns with fruit and...
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Instructional Video3:42
Tom Scott

The Brain-Eating Amoebas of Kerosene Creek

9th - 11th
Kerosene Creek is a natural hot spring near Rotorua, on the North Island of New Zealand. And there have been official warnings for years: don't put your head under water. It turns out that "brain-eating amoebas", naegleria fowleri, are a...
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Instructional Video0:17
The March of Time

Singapore tin ores

12th - Higher Ed
MOT 1942: SINGAPORE TIN ORES: WS Singapore natives in straw hats washing ore in irrigation bridge. MS Workers w/ rakes going through irrigation stream. HA WS Ship docked in port smoking factories BG.
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Instructional Video5:37
Science360

The Ogallala Aquifer

12th - Higher Ed
Farmers in Kansas and other states that sit atop the Ogallala aquifer -- the largest freshwater aquifer in North America -- are pumping out water for crop irrigation far faster than natural seepage of rainwater can replenish it....
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Instructional Video7:43
Let's Tute

Conservation of Water: Measures to Address Water Scarcity

9th - Higher Ed
This video discusses the problem of water scarcity and provides various measures that can be taken to address it, such as wise and judicious use of water, recycling and reusing water, and introducing efficient irrigation practices. The...
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Instructional Video5:45
Science360

Human Water Cycle - Water, Food, & Energy

12th - Higher Ed
Water. It's an essential building block of life, constantly moving in a hydrologic cycle that flows in a continuous loop above, across and even below the Earth's surface. But water is also constantly moving through another cycle -- the...
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Instructional Video1:00
Curated Video

NASA and Agriculture: From Seeds to Satellites

3rd - 11th
NASA satellites, data, missions, and programs have been put to use for decades to strengthen food security, track droughts and flooding, determine plant and soil health and otherwise support agriculture decision making. With observations...
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Instructional Video0:32
The March of Time

Hydroelectric Power Plant

12th - Higher Ed
MOT 1942: INDIA: BRITISH DAM: WS Hydroelectric Power Plant over river. Male sentry walking bridge. INT Turbine. EXT WS Aqueduct. WS Dam w/ gates open churning water at bottom of dam. Sentries walking past sign 'Tandomastikhan Falls...
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Instructional Video4:58
Science360

Human Water Cycle - Drinking Water

12th - Higher Ed
Water. It's an essential building block of life, constantly moving in a hydrologic cycle that flows in a continuous loop above, across and even below the Earth's surface. But water is also constantly moving through another cycle -- the...
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Instructional Video4:19
Curated Video

Peru, Ollantaytambo archaeological site

12th - Higher Ed
Around the mid-15th century, the Inca emperor Pachacuti conquered and razed Ollantaytambo; the town and the nearby region were incorporated into his personal estate.The emperor rebuilt the town with sumptuous constructions and undertook...
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Instructional Video5:55
Curated Video

Who's really using up the water in the American West?

9th - 11th
Hint: water scarcity in the Western US has more to do with our diets than our lawns. Subscribe and turn on notifications 🔔 so you don't miss any videos: http://goo.gl/0bsAjO The Western United States is currently battling the most severe...
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Instructional Video4:15
Curated Video

How Does Water Treatment Work | Environmental Chemistry | Chemistry | FuseSchool

12th - Higher Ed
Learn the basics about water treatment, as a part of environmental chemistry. Human beings have added to the natural water cycle by taking water from rivers for use in our towns and cities. We are taking a huge amount of water from...
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Instructional Video52:43
Curated Video

The Spanish Earth (1937)

6th - 11th
Tells of the struggles during the Spanish Civil War. It deals with the war at different levels: from the political level, at the ground military level focusing on battles in Madrid and the road from Madrid to Valencia, and at the support...
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Instructional Video25:57
Curated Video

They Planted A Stone (1954)

6th - 11th
A film about farming and irrigation in the Sudan in the 1950s. To purchase a clean DVD of this film for personal home use or educational use contact us at questions@archivefarms.com. To license footage from this film for commercial use...
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Instructional Video0:53
Curated Video

1,000 Years Old, But Still the Largest Reservoir on Earth

9th - 11th
Located in Angkor, the West Baray holds over 12 billion gallons of water and required 200,000 people to construct its tall embankments. Ten centuries later, its water is still being used to irrigate surrounding fields. From: ANGKOR...
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Instructional Video3:23
Curated Video

Ancient Engineering That Kept One of the Driest Cities Wet

9th - 11th
The ancient Nabataeans' water storage and irrigation system was a marvel of engineering. It was the biggest reason they were able to thrive in the harsh desert for hundreds of years. From the Series: Secrets http://bitly.com/2oJLFIo
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Instructional Video10:01
Curated Video

The Seeds of Ghost Forests

6th - 11th
Please support our video productions on Patreon: patreon.com/scifri As storms and droughts increase and sea levels rise with climate change, forested wetlands up and down the Atlantic coast are transforming from vibrant ecosystems fill...
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Instructional Video2:27
The Atlantic

Why Is America Obsessed with Lawns? (Michael Pollan)

9th - 11th
Michael Pollan explains how front lawns are endemic to America—and emblematic of the country's hypocrisies. “The conceit of the American suburb is that we’re all in a great park together,” Pollan says in the film. “The lawn symbolizes...
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Instructional Video4:40
Curated Video

How the battle for water will reshape our world -- Lester Brown

9th - 11th
Thomson Reuters Foundation. By 2025, two-thirds of people worldwide are expected to face water shortages as businesses, agriculture and growing populations compete for the ever more precious commodity. How will the battle for water...
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Instructional Video4:12
Curated Video

The water tank: A tale of two schools

9th - 11th
Thomson Reuters Foundation. By 2025, two-thirds of people worldwide are expected to face water shortages as businesses, agriculture and growing populations compete for the ever more precious commodity. How will the battle for water...
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Instructional Video1:23
Curated Video

TIRS-2 Ships From Goddard

3rd - 11th
From orbit aboard the Landsat 9 satellite, the Thermal Infrared Sensor-2, or TIRS-2, will measure the temperature of Earth's land surfaces, detecting everything from a smoldering wildfire, to the amount of irrigation used on crop fields,...

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