USGS Education
Students of all ages will have fun learning more about Mars by putting together one of several paper models of the red planet.
Watch videos from more past and present student employees at the USGS.
An Informative website, a podcast, and a collection of videos.
Putting Down Roots in Earthquake Country: Your Handbook for the Central U.S. (booklet)
20 Cool Facts about the New Madrid Seismic Zone (poster)
Bicentennial of the 1811-1812 New Madrid Earthquake Sequence (poster)
Earthquakes in the Central United States, 1699-2010 (poster)
What is the history of earthquakes in your state? The USGS has a brief earthquake history for each state along with maps, links to local organizations, and information about recent and notable earthquakes.
Get details about recent significant earthquakes, including the August 24 earthquake in Virginia, at the USGS Earthquake Summary Posters website. The posters are easily downloaded and are an excellent resource for the classroom.
Visit the USGS Office of Global Change for more information.
The animations are not a prediction of sea level rise, but rather illustrate areas of low elevation by using a blue color that simulates coverage by water. The numbers of people in those areas are tabulated.
Short on time? Listen to a seven minute podcast about earthquake prediction.
Find more information about USGS tsunami research.
Learn more at the website for the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory.
Over a third of Alaska's 140 volcanoes have been active in the last 300 years. This new online-only publication has chapters covering the tectonic setting, rocks, eruption styles, landforms, community impact, effect on climate, and monitoring of Alaska's volcanoes. Each chapter has 3-4 detailed classroom activities for grades 6-12 and a large amount of supplemental materials.
Putting Down Roots in Earthquake Country: Your Handbook for Earthquakes in the Central United States
Earthquake Hazard in the Heart of the Homeland (2006 Fact Sheet)
Details and Events for the New Madrid Bicentennial.
Explore Africa's physical and cultural geography in a new GIS lesson with seven different activities. Each activity builds on the data, skills, and concepts learned in the previous activity, and includes instructions for use with both ArcView and ArcGIS. These lessons were created for GIS beginners, but can be adapted for users at other levels.
Inspire interest in Land Remote Sensing with this spectacular new collection of satellite images, selected solely for their aesthetic appeal. Download free, high-resolution JPG or TIF files, or purchase paper copies through the USGS Store.
Good supplemental material includes the EarthNow! continuous Landsat satellite viewer, Earthshots images of environmental change (developed for classroom use), the Changes Over Time gallery, an online public lecture: Looking Down on our Planet, and the Landsat Mission website. Download free USGS satellite imagery and air photography through EarthExplorer.
The National Atlas is now launching an improved and revised digital "Set of 100 Maps" using a simple online viewer. The initial release includes five maps from different parts of the country; additional maps will be added every few months. Go here to find more ideas for teaching with topographic maps.
What does a satellite see as it passes over our planet? Find out with the EarthNow! Landsat Image Viewer, which shows mesmerizing, near-real time satellite imagery from the Landsat 5 and Landsat 7 satellites as they pass over North America.
A fun way to learn more about these satellites and their imagery is to watch a high-resolution, 1-hour public lecture, Looking Down On Our Planet: New satellite imagery reveals a changing global surface.
Also explore Earthshots: Satellite Images of Environmental Change, an educational site full of before and after satellite images with detailed information for the classroom.
Be sure to explore Lessons and Activities for topographic maps.
Learn about the importance of healthy coastal wetlands along the Gulf coast and in other locations through this online teaching guide. Each topic includes a classroom activity to illustrate the concept. A glossary, reading list, and resources for additional activities are included. For elementary and middle school students.
As a supplement, watch a new 8-minute video about the Effects of Sea-Level Rise on Coastal Wetlands in the Mississippi Delta and a new 7-minute video about the Impacts of Hurricanes on Salt Marsh and Mangrove Wetlands.
Watch two fascinating new videos in which USGS scientists recount their experiences during the eruption, and the eruption is shown to have triggered a growth in volcano science and volcano monitoring.
Be sure to visit the excellent new Water Education page with its exhaustive list of resources, and take special note of the new Data Discovery page, which includes real-time national maps for streamflow, drought, floods, groundwater levels, and water quality. The Water Use page has useful links to reports on national water use and comparisons of water consumption vs. renewable supplies.