Archive for » November, 2009 «

East Carolina 4-H Club Insect Collection

Written by John Suedbeck:

The East Carolina 4-H Club spent an evening at the A Time for Science learning center on April 24, 2009 for the purpose of collecting insects.  A lot of different types of insects were collected.  Once collected, they were identified and jarred for later processing and display.

ECU professor Tim Christensen helped with the collection and identification of the insects. He is the 4-H group’s entomology activity coordinator. The group has learned a lot from Professor Christensen and did well in competition at the North Carolina State Fair held in October 2009.

Several display boxes were submitted and the group brought home several awards. In the Special Study Collection category, Emma Christensen won 1st; her brother Sam won 2nd; and Alina Suedbeck and her sister Cassandra won 3rd and 4th  place.

In the General Collection category, Micheala Rappleyea won 1st and Danielle Henderson won 3rd place.

In the Clover Bud Collection category, Xander Moore took honorable mention.

Bug Boxes State Fair

Bug Boxes State Fair

 

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Digitial History of Eastern North Carolina

If you are a student and researching the history of our area, one online resource you will want to use is the Eastern North Carolina Digital Library.  From the website:

In 2003-2004, the North Carolina History and Fiction Digital Library was launched. During 2003-2004, approximately 200 texts were digitized pertaining to the history of 29 eastern North Carolina counties. …

…This project brings together local history materials, historical fiction related to these localities, and museum artifacts that highlight Eastern North Carolina’s rich past.

Check out the website and just browse the subjects.  Especially of interest are the artifacts with detailed pictures and stories.

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Don’t put that cooking oil down the drain!!!

Pitt County officials are offering an eco-friendly alternative for people who might be dumping cooking oils down a drain or in their backyards.

Solid waste and recycling officials are working with a commercial biodiesel processing company out of Wilson to collect the oils at two locations in the county. Containers have been placed at the transfer station off of Allen Road and the Bells Fork site on County Home Road.

County Recycling Coordinator Paula Clark said officials wanted to get the new program started before the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday and get the word out to those preparing holiday feasts.

The rest of the article is here on the Daily Reflector website.  Check out the Pitt County website here, for additional information.  The biodieseal company out of Wilson, NC is Triangle Biofuels Industries, check out their website here.

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Commercial spaceports eyed for eastern N.C.

A new aviation business park and long, isolated runways in eastern North Carolina could be keys to attracting commercial space-travel companies here, according to experts who attended a forum Thursday at Elizabeth City State University.

Leaders in the industry spoke during the daylong NewSpace Commerce Forum, including Jeff Greason, CEO of XCor Aerospace in California; Robert Richards, CEO of Odyssey Moon Lt d.; and Jeff Krukin, a consultant in the field who helped organize the forum.

For those wanting to travel internationally, you will still have to go to Charlotte, NC or Raleigh, NC.  Everyone else looking to go to the Moon or Mars can just drive to the local spaceport.  It’s nice that we won’t have to travel all the way to Cape Canaveral for intergalactic trips.  On a more serious note, the rest of the above article is here.

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U.S. Highway 64 Impact Study

When the North Carolina Department of Transportation began widening U.S. Highway 64 through eastern North Carolina a decade ago, they asked the University of Tennessee to study how the new road would impact wildlife.

Today, the completed four-lane highway shaves off an hour’s drive between Raleigh and the Outer Banks. It also cuts through some of the richest wildlife habitat in the South – thousands of acres of uninhabited swamps, pine plantations and agricultural fields with black bear densities as high as the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

UT’s goal was to determine the effectiveness of underpasses in reducing wildlife-vehicle collisions, and also to assess the short-term impacts of the road construction on nearby black bears.

Frank van Manen, adjunct professor in UT’s department of forestry, wildlife and fisheries, said the U.S. Highway 64 study was unique in that the research team was able to collect data before and after the highway was built. Data collection occurred during the 2000-2001 preconstruction phase and in 2006-2007 after the road was finished.

The rest of the article can be found on the Knoxville News Sentinel Co website, here.

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2009 Leonid Meteor Shower: “Strong Outburst” Expected

During the 2009 Leonid meteor shower, you may see anywhere from 30 to 300 shooting stars an hour, depending on whether you’re in the right place to see the showy peak on November 17, experts predict.

With the highest number of meteors streaking across the skies around 4:45 p.m. ET, the Leonids peak will be effectively invisible for viewers in North America and Europe.

In those regions, sky-watchers are advised to venture out away from bright city lights between 2 a.m. and 4 a.m. on the 17th, when they should see 30 to 50 meteors an hour.

A Time for Science will not be hosting any events directly related to the meteor shower but would like to encourage everyone to get out and view the show in your own backyard.  The full article from the above post can be found on the National Geographic News website here.

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