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Posted: April 8th, 2008, 3:10pm PDT
Jordan Hill shares a fantastic folk tale about why the planets in our solar system have auroras.
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Posted: March 24th, 2008, 3:10pm PDT
Dorian reads Day 4 from her journal as the Sun rises over Barrow.
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Posted: March 19th, 2008, 4:10pm PDT
Dorian reads Day 3 from her journal that describes her visit with the Sun-Earth Day team to a high school in Barrow.
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Posted: March 11th, 2008, 11:10am PDT
Dorian Janney meets up with a family from Barrow, Alasaka and enjoys a traditional Eskimo treat called Muktuk. Arctic Impressions is the audio journal of Dorian Janney, a middle school teacher from Rockville, Maryland. Dorian joined our Sun-Earth Day team in Barrow, Alaska for the 4th polar conference called, "Polar Gateways Arctic Circle Sunrise 2008'.
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Fetched: March 7th, 2008, 2:42am PST
Arctic Impressions is the audio journal of Dorian Janney, a middle school teacher from Rockville, Maryland. Dorian joined our Sun-Earth Day team in Barrow, Alaska for the 4th polar conference called, "Polar Gateways Arctic Circle Sunrise 2008'.
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Fetched: February 7th, 2008, 2:17pm PST
The Sun-Earth Day team traveled to Barrow, Alaska to join scientists from all over the world for the 3rd polar conference called, 'Polar Gateways Arctic Circle Sunrise 2008'
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Posted: February 1st, 2008, 7:10pm PST
The Sun-Earth Day team traveled to Barrow, Alaska to join scientists from all over the world for the 3rd polar conference called, 'Polar Gateways Arctic Circle Sunrise 2008'
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Posted: February 1st, 2008, 7:00pm PST
The Sun-Earth Day team traveled to Barrow, Alaska to join scientists from all over the world for the 3rd polar conference called, 'Polar Gateways Arctic Circle Sunrise 2008'
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Posted: January 22nd, 2008, 7:00pm PST
In today’s podcast we'll be hearing from Dr. Sten Odenwald, the chief author and editor of the Sun-Earth Day Technology Through Time series. In today's show Sten will fill us in on our latest Technology Through Time Mystery, "Where does the Sun's magnetic field come from?"
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Posted: December 4th, 2007, 7:00pm PST
Founded in 1889 in San Francisco, the Astronomical Society of the Pacific or ASP, long ago outgrew its regional sounding name to become one of the nation's leading organizations devoted to improving people's understanding, appreciation and enjoyment of astronomy and space as an avenue for advancing science literacy.