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USGS Releases Latest Bakken Oil and Gas Assessment
Host: Alex Demas | Date: 4/30/2013
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On April 30, 2013, USGS released an updated assessment of the Bakken Formation of North Dakota and Montana as part of the National Oil and Gas Assessment. We are joined by USGS Energy Resources Program Coordinator Brenda Pierce and Bakken Assessment Lead Stephanie Gaswirth to learn more about the assessment itself; why it was performed; and some context for the Bakken Formation.
(5:42) |
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181
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ShakeOut Drill: Preparing for Earthquakes
Host: Jessica Robertson | Date: 10/11/2012
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The next Great ShakeOut earthquake drill will be held on October 18, 2012. During the drill, participants will ‘drop, cover, and hold on’ to practice how to protect themselves during an earthquake.
To give us some details on ShakeOut, we are joined by two guests. First is Mike Blanpied, who is the Associate Program Coordinator for the USGS Earthquake Hazards Program. Second is Mark Benthien, who is the Director of Communication, Education and Outreach with the Southern California Earthquake Center and also coordinates the Great ShakeOut worldwide.
(9:12) |
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176
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A Year After the 2011 Virginia Earthquake: Will Shaking Continue?
Host: Melanie Gade | Date: 8/20/2012
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A year after the August 23, 2011 Virginia earthquake, USGS geologist Dr. Mike Blanpied discusses whether a similar event could occur again in the region in the near future, and in an earthquake, what you can do to stay stay safe.
(4:09) |
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175
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A Year After the 2011 Virginia Earthquake: What More Do We Know?
Host: Melanie Gade | Date: 8/20/2012
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A year after the August 23, 2011 Virginia earthquake, USGS geologist Dr. Mike Blanpied discusses USGS efforts currently underway to learn more about the cause of the event. Dr. Blanpied discusses how scientists are using the August 23 earthquake to inform estimates of the region's seismic hazard.
(5:44) |
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174
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The Big Squeeze: Pythons and Mammals in Everglades National Park
Host: Marisa Lubeck | Date: 2/29/2012
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The wet, subtropical wilderness of Everglades National Park is home to a diversity of Floridian wildlife, but one invader is causing severe changes in these native animal populations. Many of the park’s mammals are declining dramatically as a result of invasive Burmese pythons, according to a recent study by U.S. Geological Survey scientists and partners. Mid-sized mammals such as foxes, rabbits, and raccoons that were previously populous in the Everglades are the most severely affected. USGS scientist and co-author Robert Reed to discusses the Burmese python situation and what these mammal declines mean for the Everglades ecosystem.
(9:38) |
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Video
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125
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Mount St. Helens: May 18, 1980
Videographer: Stephen M. Wessells |
Date: 5/11/2010
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USGS scientists recount their experiences before, during and after the May 18, 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens. Loss of their colleague David A. Johnston and 56 others in the eruption cast a pall over one of the most dramatic geologic moments in American history.
Video Credits: Producer: Stephen M. Wessells
1980 Eruption Footage: Don Swanson
Original Graphics: Lisa Faust
Interview Producer: Ed Klimasuskas
Photographs: Lyn Topinka, C. Dan Miller, Tom Casadevall, Rocky Crandell, Mike Doukas, Dan Dzurisin, Harry Glicken, Robert Krimmel, Peter Lipman, Austin Post, J.G. Rosenbaum, Don Swanson, David Wieprecht and others from USGS.
Additional Info: http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/
Also available:
YouTube  ,
QuickTime
(7:30) |
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120
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Why Some Public-Supply Wells are More Vulnerable to Contamination Than Others
Videographer: Donna Runkle |
Date: 2/11/2010
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This video discusses how scientists have tracked what, when, and how contaminants may reach public-supply wells in four aquifers in California, Connecticut, Nebraska, and Florida.
Video Credits: Produced by Donna Runkle, Stephanie Janosy, and Sandra Eberts
Also available:
YouTube  ,
QuickTime
(12:21) |
Transcript/Links | Download directly (MP4)
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