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NOVA scienceNOW: Hurricanes
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Classroom Activity
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Objective
To model how wetlands reduce the intensity of a hurricane
Hurricanes are intense, rotating, oceanic weather systems with winds
exceeding 119 km (74 mph). Hurricanes are fueled by energy in the
warm, moist air that rises above ocean water in tropical regions.
Their impact on coastal land depends on several factors: the
strength of the low pressure system, the amount of moisture a storm
takes up, the tides, and land barriers, such as islands and
wetlands. In the NOVA scienceNOW segment on hurricanes, Dr. Shea
Penland of the University of New Orleans describes wetlands as a
coastal area's first line of defense. "They're the 'speed bump' that
slows a hurricane and reduces its intensity." Dense wetlands help
weaken a hurricane by breaking the connection between the hurricane
and warm ocean water. They also act as a physical barrier, slowing
the waves that reach the shore and reducing their destructive force.
In this activity, students examine how wetlands can deprive a
hurricane of some of the warm, moist air that supplies its energy.
The steam represents the hurricane and different types of meshed
materials represent dense and sparse wetlands. Students will record
what happens to the plume of steam (hurricane) when different
materials are placed in the steam's path.
Safety Note: This is a teacher demonstration only.
Steam can cause burns.
- steam kettle with spout
- hot plate or equivalent heat source
- protective gloves, such as oven mitts or rubber gloves
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materials with different mesh size, such as coarse window
screening, fine window screening, cheesecloth, facial tissue,
paper towel, cotton cloth (e.g., T-shirt), flannel, and diaper
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solid barrier, such as a block of wood, sheet of cardboard, or
spatula
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copy of the "Wetlands and Hurricanes" student handout (PDF
or
HTML)
Safety Note: Steam scalds! Wear protective gloves. When
placing materials over the spout tip of the kettle, as instructed
below, hold the materials so your hands are below the spout tip.
Also, make the materials taut over the spout's opening so steam goes
through the materials instead of being channeled out to the sides
where it can scald your hands.
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Boil water in the kettle. (You can make the steam more apparent
by placing the kettle against a dark background.)
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As the water heats, tell students that the water in the kettle
represents the ocean, the hot plate represents the heat from
Earth's tropical zone that warms ocean water, and the steam
plume represents a hurricane. (Have students locate the tropical
zone on a map.)
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Remind the class that Dr. Penland said that dense wetlands
weaken a hurricane by starving it of warm water, which is the
"fuel" that drives a hurricane. Rising warm, moist air adds
energy to a hurricane, which intensifies it.
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Ask students to record their observations about the plume of
steam on the "Wetlands and Hurricanes" student handout.
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Ask students to predict how the different materials will affect
the plume when you place them in its path. On the student
handout, have them record their predictions and the thinking
behind their predictions.
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Put on the protective gloves and place one of the materials
across the tip of the spout. Have the class observe and record
the effects on the plume of steam. (See the table in
Activity Answer for expected results.)
Repeat the demonstration and prediction process using the
remaining materials. Explore how students' predictions compare
to what really happened.
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Have each student answer the questions on the "Wetlands and
Hurricanes" student handout. Try any promising ideas that model
how to represent what happens when hurricanes make landfall.
Review their answers to questions 4 and 5.
Just as wetlands interfere with a hurricane's supply of warm, moist
air, the materials you put over the kettle spout disrupt the
connection between the warm, moist air produced inside the kettle
and the plume of steam at the spout. The class should see that the
plume's strength diminishes as the mesh gets finer. The fine-meshed
materials rob the plume of some of its warm, moist air. (See results
for each material in the table below.)
Effect on a steam plume when placing different materials over the
tip of a kettle spout
Material
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Effect on the Steam Plume
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Coarse window screen
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No change in plume's shape or speed at which steam comes out
of spout
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Fine window screen
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No change in plume's shape or speed at which steam comes out
of spout
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Cheesecloth |
Speed of steam coming out of spout slows slightly
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Facial tissue/Cotton cloth (T-shirt)
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Speed of steam coming out of spout slows a little. Steam rises
straight up rather than leaving the spout forcefully at an
angle.
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Flannel |
Speed of steam coming out of spout slows considerably. Steam
cloud becomes just a series of wisps.
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Diaper |
Steam cloud significantly disrupted
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Answers to question 3 on the "Wetlands and Hurricanes" student
handout include:
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What kind of wetlands does the coarse material represent?
(Sparse wetlands)
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What kind of wetlands does the fine material represent? (Dense
wetlands)
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Why did the fine material weaken the steam plume? (The fine
material reduced the supply of warm, moist air from inside the
kettle.)
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Why do dense wetlands help protect a coastal area from
hurricanes? (Dense wetlands reduce the amount of warm, moist air
going into a hurricane.)
Students' suggestions for ways to use the model to represent a
hurricane that has traveled inland might include interrupting the
flow of steam with a solid barrier, such as cardboard, or turning
off the hot plate to eliminate the supply of warm, moist air.
Model Strengths: All the parts of the hurricane system are
represented.
Model Weaknesses: The materials and their interactions are different
than the actual situation.
Web Sites: Hurricanes
EXPLORES!
www.met.fsu.edu/explores/
Provides weather satellite interpretation and satellite imagery
received at Florida State University, which implements the NOAA
Direct Readout Program from three polar orbiting satellites.
Hurricanes: University of Illinois's On-Line Meteorology Guide
ww2010.atmos.uiuc.edu/(Gh)/guides/mtr/hurr/home.rxml
Offers resources for teaching meteorology and about the formation
and behavior of hurricanes. The site has movies of hurricanes and
over 20 years' worth of hurricane tracks.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Defense
Meteorological Satellite Program
www.ngdc.noaa.gov/dmsp/dmsp.html
Provides great satellite images of hurricanes and typhoons.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Geostationary
Satellite
www.goes.noaa.gov/
Provides satellite imagery of the continental U.S., Puerto Rico,
Alaska, and Hawaii. It also provides sea surface temperatures. The
information on tropical regions is particularly pertinent during the
hurricane season.
National Weather Service's Climate Prediction Center
www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/outreach/education.shtml
Offers educational materials to help people understand how
scientists make and use climate forecasts, and understand the role
of the climate system and weather-related extreme events in their
lives.
Web Sites: Wetlands
Coastal Wetlands Planning, Protection and Restoration Act
www.lacoast.gov/education/overview/Cwppra%20intro.htm
Provides an overview of the Coastal Wetlands Planning, Protection
and Restoration Act, which discusses the importance of coastal
restoration in Louisiana in terms of the future of coastal
communities and protection from tropical storms and hurricanes.
Estuaries.Gov
estuaries.gov/
Provides information on National Estuaries Day activities and serves
as a resource for information on the importance of estuaries and the
need to protect them (joint NOAA and EPA site).
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/habitat/habitatprotection/wetlands.htm
Provides an overview of NOAA's efforts to protect, conserve,
enhance, and restore coastal wetlands.
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's National Wetlands Inventory
www.nwi.fws.gov
Provides information on the characteristics, extent, and status of
the nation's wetlands, deepwater habitats, and other wildlife
habitats.
Books: Hurricanes
Sean Smith and Brent A. Ford.
Project Earth Science: Meteorology.
Arlington, VA: National Science Teachers Association, 1994.
Contains integrated activities that introduce the atmosphere,
weather, and variables that affect the movement of air masses.
Includes a hurricane tracking activity. Provides lesson plans and
student pages.
Jack Williams.
The Weather Book: An Easy-to-Understand Guide to the USA's
Weather.
Arlington, VA: National Science Teachers Association, 1992.
Provides a reader-friendly introduction to weather and climate.
Full-color graphics and photographs explain and illustrate weather
concepts. Produced by the USA Today weather staff.
Books: Wetlands
William Niering.
Wetlands.
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1985.
Pubished by National Audubon Society. Comprehensive but accessible
field guide includes descriptions of different kinds of wetlands and
the plants and animals inhabiting them as well as a discussion of
the dynamics of wetlands. Illustrated with maps, color plates, and
photographs.
Laurence Pringle.
Estuaries, Where Rivers Meet the Sea.
New York: The MacMillan, 1993.
Combines simple, concise text with photographs. Describes bays and
salt marshes and the plants and animals that live there. Examines
the interrelationships between tides, grasses, crabs, fish, and
birds.
John and Mildred Teal.
Life and Death of the Salt Marsh.
New York: Ballantine Books, 1969.
Describes the ecology of East Coast salt marshes, the plants and
animals inhabiting them, their contributions to human welfare and
the often-negative impact of human civilization on salt marshes.
Authoritative, well illustrated, and easy to understand.
The "Wetlands and Hurricanes" activity aligns with the following
National Science Education Standards:
Grades 5-8
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Science Standard B: Physical Science
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Transfer of Energy:
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Science Standard D: Earth and Space Science
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Structure of the Earth system:
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Global patterns of atmospheric movement influence local weather.
Oceans have a major effect on climate because water in the
oceans holds a large amount of heat.
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Living organisms have played many roles in the Earth system,
including affecting the composition of the atmosphere, producing
some types of rocks, and contributing to the weathering of
rocks.
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Science Standard F: Science in Personal and Social
Perspectives
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Populations, resources, and environments:
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When an area becomes overpopulated, the environment will become
degraded due to the increased use of resources.
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Causes of environmental degradation and resource depletion vary
from region to region and from country to country.
Natural hazards:
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Internal and external processes of the Earth system cause
natural hazards, events that change or destroy human and
wildlife habitats, damage property, and harm or kill humans.
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Human activities also can induce hazards through resource
acquisition, urban growth, land-use decisions, and waste
disposal. Such activities can accelerate many natural changes.
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Natural hazards can present personal and societal challenges
because misidentifying the change or incorrectly estimating the
rate and scale of change may result in either too little
attention and significant human costs or too much cost for
unneeded preventive measures.
Risks and Benefits:
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Risk analysis considers the type of hazard and estimates the
number of people that might be exposed and the number likely to
suffer consequences. The results are used to determine the
options for reducing or eliminating risks.
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Students should understand the risks associated with natural
hazards (fires, floods, tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, and
volcanic eruptions).
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Individuals can use a systematic approach to thinking critically
about risks and benefits. Examples include applying probability
estimates to risks and comparing them to estimated personal and
social benefits.
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Important personal and social decisions are made based on
perceptions of benefits and risks.
Grades 9-12
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Science Standard B: Physical Science
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Interactions of energy and matter:
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Waves, including sound and seismic waves, waves on water, and
light waves, have energy and can transfer energy when they
interact with matter.
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Science Standard D: Earth and Space Science
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Energy in the Earth system:
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Science Standard F: Science in Personal and Social
Perspectives
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Personal and community health:
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Hazards and the potential for accidents exist. Regardless of the
environment, the possibility of injury, illness, disability, or
death may be present. Humans have a variety of
mechanisms—sensory, motor, emotional, social, and
technological—that can reduce and modify hazards
Natural resources:
Environmental quality:
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Natural ecosystems provide an array of basic processes that
affect humans. Humans are changing many of these basic
processes, and the changes may be detrimental to humans.
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Materials from human societies affect both physical and chemical
cycles of the Earth.
Many factors influence environmental quality.
Natural and human-induced hazards:
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Normal adjustments of Earth may be hazardous for humans. Humans
live at the interface between the atmosphere driven by solar
energy and the upper mantle where convection creates changes in
the Earth's solid crust. As societies have grown, become stable,
and come to value aspects of the environment, vulnerability to
natural processes of change has increased.
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Human activities can enhance potential for hazards. Acquisition
of resources, urban growth, and waste disposal can accelerate
rates of natural change.
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Natural and human-induced hazards present the need for humans to
assess potential danger and risk. Many changes in the
environment designed by humans bring benefits to society as well
as cause risks.
Classroom Activity Author
Developed by WGBH Educational Outreach staff.
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