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Golden Gate National Recreational AreaHistoric officers' homes at Fort Baker
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Golden Gate National Recreational Area
Online Games
Identify rocks in the laboratory and then construct the sudduction zone.

Subduction Construction!
Your students journey into the Subduction Zone to solve the geologic mystery of how the rocks you see in the cliffs of the Golden Gate formed millions of years ago. In this virtual exploration, students will collect rock samples in the field; examine and identify their samples in the laboratory; and, use this information to piece together a subduction zone, layer-by-layer in geologic context. A great way to introduce subduction or conclude a unit by checking for understanding.

Go Silver and Blue
Endangered butterflies in the Golden Gate National Parks? Yes, the mission blue, no larger than a quarter, lives in the northern and southern headlands of the park. Survival hasn’t been easy—especially when silver lupine and other ecologically linked plants are threatened. In The Restoration Cycle, your students go on a special animated journey through the Milagra Ridge landscape to discover how park professionals and trained volunteers mix scientific inquiry and community camaraderie to restore critical habitat.

Mission Quilt
How do we protect a migrating species? How do we save a favorite place? Mission Quilt is an interactive puzzle that illustrates the issues and challenges the National Park Service faces in the preservation of nationally significant resources. Students construct the NPS mission statement and uncover the plants, animals, and cultural traditions of the Golden Gate NRA landscape. Mission Quilt also asks students to consider what they would pass along as their valued legacy.

Battle for the Dunes
Why restore indigenous habitats? Here’s an interactive game that challenges your students to use knowledge and speed as they discover the principles and purpose of habitat restoration. Students must revegetate the beach dune communities before the area is taken over by ice plant, an invasive exotic species. This fun instructional game helps students identify plants, recognize adaptations, and gain a greater understanding of biological diversity.

Dichotomous From Top to Bottomous
Cultivate your students' 8th Intelligence—Naturalist—with our fun dichotomous plant key. Follow the clues!

Beach at Crissy Field  

Did You Know?
One of the oldest tidal gauges in the country at Crissy Field shows 8 inches of sea level rise over the past 100 years (a rate 2 to 10 times higher than the previous 5000 years). We could see 2 to 3 more rise in the next 100 years.

Last Updated: October 23, 2008 at 15:25 EST