RCN CE3SAR Courses
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://hdl.handle.net/1969.6/730
This community includes collections of six sustainability courses created by faculty of RCN institutions. These course materials (learning objects) can be reused at different granularity levels, such as a chapter or a stand alone item (image, audio, or video). The six courses are Introduction to South Texas, Water, Air Quality, Building Sustainability Environment, Sustainability Society, and Energy.
The course items are free to use by faculty of RCN CE3SAR institutions. Other users need permission to reuse these materials. Contact phone: 361-825-3047, Point of Contact: Hong Xu
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Browsing RCN CE3SAR Courses by Issue Date
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Item Overview of South Texas(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Tobin, KennethOverview of South Texas. Geographic overview of South Texas that takes a tour of its major geographic features.Item Chapter 11: Bays and Estuaries(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Rosen, RudolphTexas bays and estuaries provide vital ecosystems and nursery habitat for many important Gulf species, feeding and resting places for migrating birds, and billions of dollars to the Texas economy.Item Cameron County Storm Surge(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Tobin, KennethCameron County Storm Surge. SLOSH model results for Cameron County, Texas (Brownsville) showing inundation from storm surge associated with a category 1 to 5 hurricane.Item Texas Night Lights Time Series 1992 - 2013(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Tobin, KennethTexas Night Lights Time Series 1992-2013. Expansion of Texas urban area and petroleum fields is illustrated on an annual basis.Item Chapter 4: Living in Water(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Rosen, RudolphAll aquatic species, including fish and other aquatic animals, are uniquely adapted to life in or around water.Item Chapter 13: Water for People and the Environment(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Rosen, Rudolphne of the greatest challenges facing Texas is balancing the water needs of people with the needs of our environment. We are all connected by water, and how much usable water we have for the future will depend on what we do to conserve water today.Item South Texas Historic Total Water Demand and Projections(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Tobin, KennethSouth Texas Historic Total Water Demand and Projections. Historic (1984-2012) and future (2020-2070) total South Texas water demand (county) is illustrated.Item South Texas Projections 2020-2070 Municipal Water Demand Total(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Tobin, KennethSouth Texas Projections 2020-2070 Municipal Water Demand Total. Future (2020-2070) South Texas municipal water demand is depicted on a county basis.Item Chapter 9: Lakes and Ponds(2016-01) Rosen, RudolphLakes and ponds provide habitat for many plants, insects, fish, birds and other wildlife, much of our drinking water and important economic and recreational opportunities for Texans.Item Chapter 12: Oceans: The Gulf of Mexico(2016-01) Rosen, RudolphThe Gulf of Mexico is one of the most productive waters in the world, and it is among the most threatened by human actions and neglect.Item Climate Change Scenarios Annual Total Precipitation 2020-2099(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Tobin, KennethClimate Change Scenarios Annual Total Precipitation 2020-2099. Business as usual climate change scenario illustrates possible changes in annual precipitation in Texas during the 21st centuryItem Chapter 8: Streams and Rivers(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Rosen, RudolphTexas streams and rivers support diverse ecosystems that are dependent upon the size and flow of water. The healthiest streams and rivers are those with the least altered natural processes.Item Chapter 7: Aquifers and Springs(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Rosen, RudolphSprings have attracted humans to settle nearby where water is abundant, but careful use is necessary to balance the recharge of aquifers with the use by people. Aquifers and springs also provide aquatic habitats where unique species live on the brink of extinction.Item South Texas Projections 2020-2070 Individual Water Demand Per Person(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Tobin, KennethSouth Texas Projections 2020-2070 Individual Water Demand Per Person. Future (2020-2070) South Texas water demand is normalized on a per person basis in each county.Item Chapter 5: From Sun to Sunfish(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Rosen, RudolphAquatic habitats are communities in which complex interactions take place among populations and individual organisms as they compete for limited resources in an interdependent web of relationships.Item Chapter 1: Water is Life(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Rosen, RudolphWater has properties that make it essential to life. And although the earth is known as “the water planet,” it has limited quantities of available freshwater.Item Chapter 6: Texas Aquatic Ecosystems(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Rosen, RudolphEcosystems are complex interdependent webs of relationships between living and nonliving things. Texas has six kinds of aquatic ecosystem supporting significant biodiversity.Item Chapter 10: Wetlands(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Rosen, RudolphWetlands are among the most productive ecosystems in the world, and home to many specially adapted plant and wildlife species. Wetlands provide many important benefits to people, fish, and wildlife.Item South Texas Historic Population and Projections Until 2050(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Tobin, KennethShows decade-by-decade changes in South Texas county population.Item Chapter 3: What’s Your Watershed Address?(RCN CE3SAR project, 2016-01) Rosen, RudolphEveryone lives in a watershed. Everything that happens on the land affects the water in that watershed.