Educational Materials Collection
Welcome to the EarthScope ANGLE educational materials collection! To get started, type a keyword into the search bar or refine your search using the boxes on the right.
Resource Type
Subject Show all
- Earthquakes 7 matches
- Mass Wasting 1 match
- Mitigation and Preparedness 2 matches
- Tsunami 2 matches
- Volcanism 1 match
Natural Hazards
9 matches General/OtherEarthScope Geophysics Data: Data
- 1 match General/Other
- GPS/GNSS 1 match
- Seismic 3 matches
Special Interest
Quantitative Skills
Results 1 - 9 of 9 matches
Earthquake Hazard Maps & Liquefaction: Alaska emphasis
TOTLE (Teachers on the Leading Edge), CEETEP (Cascadia EarthScope Earthquake and Tsunami Education Program), EarthScope ANGLE, and ShakeAlert projects
Ground shaking is the primary cause of earthquake damage to man-made structures. This exercise combines three related activities on the topic of shaking-induced ground instability: a ground shaking amplification demonstration, a seismic landslides demonstration, and a liquefaction experiment. The amplitude of ground shaking is affected by the type of near-surface rocks and soil. Earthquake ground shaking can cause even gently sloping areas to slide when those same areas would be stable under normal conditions. Liquefaction is a phenomenon where water-saturated sand and silt take on the characteristics of a dense liquid during the intense ground shaking of an earthquake and deform. Includes Alaska and San Francisco examples.
Grade Level: Informal, Middle (6-8), Intermediate (3-5), General Public, High School (9-12)
Subject: Natural Hazards:Earthquakes, Mass Wasting, Natural Hazards, Engineering, Geoscience, Seismology
Special Interest: Hazards, Data, models, or simulations
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Build a Better Wall
FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Administration) and CEETEP (Cascadia EarthScope Earthquake and Tsunami Education Program). Improvements by ShakeAlert.
How can we design buildings to withstand an earthquake? This activity uses simple materials and gives learners a chance to experiment with structures that can withstand an earthquake. Two optional activities explore building damage by subjecting models to ground vibration on a small shake table.
Grade Level: General Public, High School (9-12), College Lower (13-14), Informal, Intermediate (3-5), Middle (6-8)
Subject: Natural Hazards:Earthquakes, Natural Hazards, Geoscience, Natural Hazards:Mitigation and Preparedness, Engineering
Special Interest: Hazards, Data, models, or simulations
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"We Need All the Assistance You Have..."
USGS (US Geological Survey)
This exercise provides a basic introduction to volcanic hazards. Students learn about different types of volcanic hazards through researching examples from Alaskan eruptions. They also group the hazards as proximal and distal to consider how emergency response plans might differ. A recording of the KLM flight 867 flight that lost power to all four engines when it flew into an ash cloud from a 1989 Mt Redoubt eruption provides a compelling example of risk from volcanoes. (Note: the plane was ultimately able to regain enough power to land safely in Anchorage.) Students learn about the Volcano Hazards Alert-Notification System for both ground-based and aviation applications.
Grade Level: High School (9-12), Middle (6-8), Intermediate (3-5)
Subject: Natural Hazards, Volcanism, Geoscience
Special Interest: Hazards
Frequency of Large Earthquakes
Jennifer Pickering
Using the IRIS Earthquake Browser tool, students gather data to support a claim about how many large (Mw 8+) earthquakes will happen globally each year. This activity provides scaffolded experience downloading data and manipulating data within a spreadsheet.
Grade Level: College Lower (13-14), Middle (6-8), Intermediate (3-5), High School (9-12)
Subject: Natural Hazards:Earthquakes, Geoscience, Natural Hazards, Tectonics
EarthScope Geophysics Data: Data: Data:Seismic, Data, Geophysics Data, Seismic
Special Interest: Hazards, Quantitative
Quantitative Skills: Arithmetic/Computation
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Reading an Earthquake Seismogram
Jennifer Pickering
Introductory lesson that deconstructs the information that can be gleaned from a single seismogram.
Grade Level: College Lower (13-14), Middle (6-8), High School (9-12), Intermediate (3-5)
Subject: Natural Hazards:Earthquakes, Geoscience, Natural Hazards, Tectonics
EarthScope Geophysics Data: Data: Data:Seismic
Special Interest: Hazards, Data, models, or simulations
Earthquake Intensity
Jennifer Pickering
Introductory lesson that compares ShakeMaps between earthquakes in the same location but different magnitudes, and earthquakes of the same magnitude but different depths, to acquaint learners to the fundamental controls on intensity of shaking felt during an event: magnitude and distance from the earthquake source.
Grade Level: College Lower (13-14), Middle (6-8), High School (9-12), Intermediate (3-5)
Subject: Natural Hazards, Earthquakes, Geoscience, Seismology, Tectonics
Special Interest: Hazards, Data, models, or simulations
Did You Feel It?
Jennifer Pickering
Did you have an earthquake where you live and want to participate in Community Science? Would you like students to better understand how earthquake intensity is determined? This guide provides ideas about how you can incorporate the online USGS tool: Did You Feel It? into your classroom.
Grade Level: College Lower (13-14), High School (9-12), Middle (6-8), Intermediate (3-5)
Subject: Natural Hazards, Earthquakes
Special Interest: Hazards, Process of Science
Making Community Connections to Co-learn about Earthquakes
Jennifer Pickering
Many people live in regions prone to earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanic eruptions, but the hazards and risks inherent in our communities may be very different. Making connections with learners from another location is a great way to share knowledge and practice science communication skills. Video conferencing applications like Zoom and Skype make it possible to connect with learners anywhere in the world. This activity provides a simple protocol, and a form for submitting a request to connect with a classroom teacher in Anchorage, Alaska.
Grade Level: High School (9-12), Middle (6-8), Intermediate (3-5)
Subject: Natural Hazards, Tectonics, Natural Hazards:Tsunami, Seismology, Geoscience, Natural Hazards:Earthquakes, Mitigation and Preparedness
EarthScope Geophysics Data: Data: Data:Seismic, GPS/GNSS, Geophysics GPS/GNSS
Special Interest: Hazards, Process of Science, Quantitative
Quantitative Skills: Gathering Data, Graphs
Coastal Alaska is Tsunami Country (in 9 languages)
USGS ShakeAlert program and EarthScope ANGLE project participants
Factsheet and infographics on protecting yourself in a tsunami hazard zone in Alaska. Whether coastal Alaska is your home, workplace, or a travel destination, it is important to know how to stay safe in the event of a tsunami. Safety actions vary for different communities in Alaska.
Grade Level: General Public, Informal, Intermediate (3-5), Middle (6-8), High School (9-12), College Lower (13-14)
Subject: Natural Hazards, Tsunami
Special Interest: Hazards