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Sven Holbik
Registrace 3. 10. 2014
Hello and welcome to my channel! I post video lectures on topics in earth science, oceanography and electron microscopy. I created this channel to help my online students experience an in-person style lecture. I also refer all my students to this channel to review or to catch up on missing material. I hope you find these videos helpful and I'm open to any feedback for improvement.
Beaches, Shoreline Processes, and Coastal Oceans (OCE-1001)
Beaches, Shoreline Processes, and Coastal Oceans (OCE-1001)
zhlédnutí: 11 821
Video
Tides (OCE-1001)
zhlédnutí 2,9KPřed 3 lety
Additional Resources: Neil deGrasse Tyson Explains the Tides czcams.com/video/dBwNadry-TU/video.html
Glaciers, Deserts, and Wind (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
zhlédnutí 796Před 3 lety
Glaciers, Deserts, and Wind (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
Ocean Circulation (OCE-1001)
zhlédnutí 5KPřed 3 lety
Additional Resources: Ocean Currents (oceancurrents.rsmas.miami.edu/) ESA: Rogue Waves (www.nationalgeographic.org/article/rogue-waves/) Global Map of Ocean Conditions (earth.nullschool.net/)
Air Sea Interaction (OCE-1001)
zhlédnutí 4,1KPřed 3 lety
Additional Resources: Global Map of Ocean Conditions (earth.nullschool.net/)
Marine Sediments (OCE-1001)
zhlédnutí 3,4KPřed 3 lety
Additional Resources: International Ocean Discovery Program www.iodp.org/ iodp.tamu.edu/ International Ocean Drilling Data Archive www.ngdc.noaa.gov/mgg/geology/drill.html
Marine Provinces (OCE-1001)
zhlédnutí 1,9KPřed 3 lety
Additional Resources: Google Earth Sea Floor Depth earth.google.com/web/data=CiQSIhIgYjczNzM1Y2E0Y2FiMTFlODhlMTU3MTM3ODRlMDYzMjM National Ocean Service (NOS) Office of Coast Survey U.S. Bathymetric & Fishing Maps www.ngdc.noaa.gov/mgg/bathymetry/maps/nos_intro.html
Plate Tectonics (OCE-1001)
zhlédnutí 3KPřed 3 lety
Additional Resources: The Earth's Interior (pubs.usgs.gov/gip/interior/) Maps of Ancient Earth (deeptimemaps.com/)
Introduction to Oceanography (OCE-1001)
zhlédnutí 16KPřed 3 lety
Additional Resources: National Geophysical Data Center (www.ngdc.noaa.gov/mgg/mggd.html#_blank) NASA Ocean and Earth System (science.nasa.gov/earth-science/oceanography/ocean-earth-system/) NOAA (www.noaa.gov/) Hydrothermal Vent Communities (php.radford.edu/~swoodwar/biomes/?page_id=1027) Global Map of Current Ocean and Atmospheric Conditions (earth.nullschool.net/)
Groundwater (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
zhlédnutí 746Před 4 lety
Aquifers in Maryland (www.mgs.md.gov/groundwater/md_groundwater.html) USGS Groundwater (www.usgs.gov/mission-areas/water-resources/science/science-topics/groundwater-aquifers-wells-and-springs) EPA Groundwater and Drinking Water (www.epa.gov/ground-water-and-drinking-water)
Running Water (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
zhlédnutí 602Před 4 lety
USGS Freshwater (www.usgs.gov/water/) EPA Our Waters (www.epa.gov/environmental-topics/water-topics#our-waters) EPA Water Resources (www.usgs.gov/mission-areas/water-resources)
Weathering, Soils and Mass Wasting (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
zhlédnutí 1,3KPřed 4 lety
USGS Landslide Hazards Program (www.usgs.gov/programs/landslide-hazards) Chesapeake Bay Program (www.chesapeakebay.net/issues/sediment)
Crustal Deformation and Mountain Building (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
zhlédnutí 3,6KPřed 4 lety
USGS Birth of the Mountains (www.softchalkcloud.com/lesson/files/aiUNHzjupy39mK/Birth of Appalachian mts.pdf) Mountain Building (www.physicalgeography.net/fundamentals/10k.html)
Earthquakes and Earth's Interior (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
zhlédnutí 1,2KPřed 4 lety
Earthquakes and Earth's Interior (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
Igneous Rocks Lecture (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
zhlédnutí 1,4KPřed 4 lety
Igneous Rocks Lecture (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
Matter and Minerals (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
zhlédnutí 1,6KPřed 4 lety
Matter and Minerals (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
Introduction to Earth Science (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
zhlédnutí 1,7KPřed 4 lety
Introduction to Earth Science (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
Global Climate Change (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
zhlédnutí 445Před 4 lety
Global Climate Change (ESC-1000 & ES-105)
thank you professor
Thank you this is so helpful
Hello Sven. I’m enjoying your lecture series very much, just to further my own knowledge of the subject of oceanography and thank you for having prepared the presentations. Is there a particular textbook or textbooks which you could recommend & is there a particular point of purchase ?
not sure if youre still actively looking at your comment inbox. could you point me in a direction on how to study more about beaches pertaining to finding objects such as jewelry/coins? im a metal detectorist and ive spent some time on the beaches but never bothered to try and study the science behind beaches. ive only watched this video so far from your channel and it showcased some interesting things with sand (berms, shorelines, shores, bars, troughs). i am on the west coast as well so its great that it focuses on that area. if you can direct towards an area to study, to one of your videos, or tell me with a brief run down what to know for understanding the movement of objects on beaches then that would be great as i am flying blind without any scientific terms to learn or search for
Slip of the tongue gyre mis-named at 12:48 see 17:52
MEXICOOOOO!
i can barely hear this video and my volume is on max. I am sure its a great lesson, but it's a little annoying. I got to go to a different video
How can we explain upwelling or downwelling in the poles and the gyres?
Pressure chimneys. Cold surface water contracts & makes a surface dent, water flows to fill it and makes the column to the sea bed higher pressure (more weight above it) so it shoves water towards equator and beyond. Deep water leaving makes the entire column drop so now there's a surface dent again and so on, it's unending until the deep pressure along it path rises to match its higher pressure or its own pressure decreases because its surface water heat. Ice forms in pancakes if its cold enough, and wind blows the low-salt pancakes away making a surface dent, salty water around flows into the dent, now its saltier so its heavier. As long as it has a horizontal path at a depth range it can go on for ever. When the water its shoving gets shoved into a cul de sac (sea bed rising) it lifts the entire ocean above it like a wedge and that makes a surface bulge so surface water runs down hill off the bulge back to where it came from. That's a long-distance overturning circulation like 25,000 km or 40,000 km, whatever. Simple stuff.
I Enjoy your lectures, Very Laconic.
The burning of part of the Library was before Christianity at around 48bc by Julius Ceaser. "It is said that the Library, or part of its collection, was accidentally burned by Julius Caesar during his civil war in 48 BC, but it is unclear how much was actually destroyed and it seems to have either survived or been rebuilt shortly thereafter. The geographer Strabo mentions having visited the Mouseion in around 20 BC, and the prodigious scholarly output of Didymus Chalcenterus in Alexandria from this period indicates that he had access to at least some of the Library's resources. The Library dwindled during the Roman period, from a lack of funding and support. Its membership appears to have ceased by the 260s AD. Between 270 and 275 AD, Alexandria saw a Palmyrene invasion and an imperial counterattack that probably destroyed whatever remained of the Library, if it still existed. The daughter library in the Serapeum may have survived after the main Library's destruction. The Serapeum was vandalized and demolished in 391 AD under a decree issued by bishop Theophilus of Alexandria, but it does not seem to have housed books at the time, and was mainly used as a gathering place for Neoplatonist philosophers following the teachings of Iamblichus."
Good lecture But sounds like a 1980s pilots headpiece
Thanks for your service
Hello Sven. Thank you very much for the fantastic , incredibly educational presentation on ocean circulation. I find it thoroughly enjoyable and you do a great job explaining the complex subject.
Thank you very much for this ❤
thanks a lot!
The highest peaks for my samples are Si and O. Does it indicate their abundance in the samples?
Guyots
Loving it!
Hi Sven. One month ago I have found your channel. I have been watching your videos eagerly ever since.This is the last video for me, now I have watched them all. Your content is great, I enjoyed it very much. Thank you!
Thank you ❤❤
You're welcome 😊
Thank you so much! I had a health issue and missed this lecture at my school so this really helps!
I love all your lectures, but the mic was so annoying to listen ...
Taking Oceanography now for college. Thanks yo. I can listen to this lecture and it’s like reading the first few assignments for class.
Happy to help!
Thank you for leaving these up! I start an Oceanography 208 class in the fall and really need to study for it
Ok
Thanks for this!
41:12 interesting, but it would have been great having an explanation of how the speed of the spreading creates those different topographies in mid ocean boundaries.
37:10 this is a process that I find unclear. If I follow your diagrams, in step 1 there is upwarping and fault formation. In step 2 there is thinning, but thinning needs to occur due to tensional forces. But if there are faults between the blocks of rock, how can this tensional forces affect the rocks between faults to make them thinner?
Very helpful. The only problem is the sound quality.
Hi my teacher assigned this lecture for our Oceanography class and it's a great lecture, I also watched your lecture on ocean currents. It's just that maybe your microphone is off because your voice keeps fading in and out and I keep hearing you breath into the mic and it's a bit distracting just fyi.
Yes. Thanks for the feedback. I'm planning on recording new videos and fixing the audio issues.
Thank you very much Mr. Holbik
Thank you for the lecture
thanks sven
Thank you so much for posting these! I take online classes so this helps so much!!!
Awesome teaching
thank you very much for uploading your videos they have been vital since my professor only shows PowerPoints without audio.
czcams.com/video/1MFzcl-kZHo/video.html
Thank you for these videos! My class is online and it's hard to understand the concepts by reading words on a book, but if you show me a picture of a barrier island then it makes sense much faster. I appreciate your time and dedication to make this. It's been very helpful and interesting for me.
Hi Thanks for Uploading. It is easier to listen through than read the whole textbook.
Tetep nonton meski gak ngerti dia ngomong apa 🙂🙂🙂👍 Btw ini gw direkomendasi sama someone yang spesial 😘
i am listening
Nice , thank you.
You explain everything very well.
Thanks for posting these videos, my professor did not do this in our class. I very much appreciate it.
Please, where is Part 5? Thank you for the tutorials as well.
These videos are super helpful. I've been listening to them while I work to supplement and help reatin my in person lectures. I just wish they were in a Playlist ordered by chapter. Thanks for all the help. This stuff is fascinating.
Great idea. I'll try and create a playlist with the lectures in order.
czcams.com/video/kl6FtBH1aJw/video.html I created an Oceanography playlist. Hope this helps!
@@svenholbik3043 Thank you so much! This series has been tremendously helpful. It really helps to retain the information when you can tell the professor is passionate about the material.
Could you share your power points? Very helpful video!
Hey Solomiya. I'm not sure how I can share the PowerPoint slides. Is this something I can leave in the description area?
I wish i knew this channel before
Some good animations. What tools do you use?
Hey Richard. I use animations found through google searches!
Thank you so much for video plz continue complete the book