ED53F-04
Interactive Sea Level Rise App & Online Viewer Offers Deep Dive Into Climate
Abstract:
Climate has captured the attention of the public but its complexity can cause interested individuals to turn to opinion pieces, news articles or blogs for information. These platforms often oversimplify or present heavily interpreted or personalized perspectives. Data interactives are an extremely effective way to explore complex geoscience topics like climate, opening windows of understanding for the user that have previously been closed.Layering data onto maps through programs like GeoMapApp and the Earth Observer App has allowed users to dig directly into science data, but with only limited scaffolding. The interactive ‘Polar Explorer: Sea Level Explorer App’ provides a richly layered introduction to a range of topics connected to sea level rise. Each map is supported with a pop up and a short audio file of supplementary material, and an information page that includes the data source and links for further reading. This type of learning platform works well for both the formal and informal learning environment.
Through science data displayed as map visualizations the user is invited into topics through an introductory question, such as “Why does sea level change?” After clicking on that question the user moves to a second layer of questions exploring the role of the ocean, the atmosphere, the contribution from the world’s glaciers, world’s ice sheets and other less obvious considerations such as the role of post-glacial rebound, or the mining of groundwater. Each question ends in a data map, or series of maps, that offer opportunities to interact with the topic. Under the role of the ocean ‘Internal Ocean Temperature’ offers the user a chance to touch to see temperature values spatially over the world’s ocean, or to click through a data series starting at the ocean surface and diving to 5000 meters of depth showing how temperature changes with depth. Other sections, like the role of deglaciation of North America, allow the user to click and see change through time as the Laurentide ice sheet retreated, from 18,000 to 5,000 years ago, changing sea level as it melted.
Interacting with the range of topics and the different data layers allows the user to see first hand how climate and sea level have changed through time and how it has, and does, vary around the world.