Product Details

Quick Search: advanced search

Sign In


Email:

Password:


Not a member already? Register here
Member benefits include discounted pricing, downloadable support material and resources updates including details of our latest releases & special offers.

Order Basket


Click the cart to view your items.



Raise teen awareness of the threats that Internet users face...

CYBERSENSE

3 x 20-minute programmes
Chaptered DVD
Age range: 14-19 years



Mastering the art of research is a life long skill that will serve you well!



A Schlessinger Media Production
6 x 23-minute programmes
VHS & Chaptered DVD
Age range: 11-19 years



Improve your students' results...



A Schlessinger Media Production
7 x 23-minute programmes
VHS & Chaptered DVD
Age range: 11-19 years


Bill Nye The Science Guy Series
Bill Nye knows how to provide easy access to hard science. What's his secret? A fast-paced approach blending humorous hijinks and hands-on activities with real-life situations, with a focus on illustrating and reinforcing key concepts in a really enjoyable and totally non-boring way! Bill encourages young students to ask interesting questions... then shows them how to discover fascinating answers.

Erosion
Erosion is going on all day, all the time. It's happening right now, as it has done since Earth was formed around 4.5 billion years ago!

Dirt, sand, and rock from the Earth's surface gets blown, sliced, torn, swallowed and distributed all over the world. What was yesterday's hill is tomorrow's flat plain. The planet looks a lot different than it did when it formed four and a half billion years ago. The force of erosion, the slow wearing away of the land, has never ceased.

The tools of erosion are the atmosphere and the oceans. They provide the planet with weather - wind, rain, snow and ice. Weather pelts the surface of the Earth, wearing it down little by little. Rainwater flowing over the ground quickly turns brown as it takes rocks and soil along with it for the ride. As wind barrels against a cliff, tiny particles of the rock get blown away with it. Car exhaust gases fill rain clouds with acid rain, which dissolves away rocks with each falling drop. Given enough time, the forces of erosion will beat every mountain in the world into smaller and smaller pieces.

The effects of erosion are hard to see in a lifetime. The Colorado River is still cutting the Grand Canyon deeper, although no one alive will probably ever notice a significant difference. Since erosion has been happening forever, we can see how erosion has changed the Earth over millions of years. The Earth was so cold over 10,000 years ago that mile-thick sheets of ice called glaciers covered large portions of land. These huge ice flows scraped up rocks in some places, dumping their stony passengers when the glaciers melted. Erosion can make slow, almost invisible modifications, or sudden, drastic alterations of the landscape. Flash floods re-carve river valleys; mudslides cover roads; sinkholes devour houses. Erosion at a fast rate can spell catastrophe.

The forces of erosion will always be at work, giving the Earth a continual facelift


Running Time:          26 mins
Age Range:                9 - 13 Years
Year of Production:   1999

FormatOrder Code Price*
DVD009-10062D  £59
VHS009-10062V  £59