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Christopher Whitney Green

Ecologist, Photographer, Science Communication Professional

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Coastal Stewardship and Climate Change: Preserving Cultural Resources

by Christopher Green

As the Science Communication Biotech at Cape Cod National Seashore, I produced a series of videos titled ‘Coastal Stewardship and Climate Change‘. The final episode I completed is titled ‘Preserving Cultural Resources‘. You can watch the video on Vimeo (below) if you have the password. My appointment ended before the video received final approval, and it has yet to be officially released. I can share it with a prospective employer as a portfolio piece. Feel free to request the password.

This film tells the story of a Cape Cod life-saving station that was physically moved to preserve it from rising sea levels. Sediment transport science is woven into the narrative with a call to inspire the next generation to engage in preservation efforts now and in the future.

The videos in this series were conceived as multi-purpose pieces. With social media deployment one of the goals, the length is limited to five minutes or less. Even that is probably too long!

Filed Under: Climate Change, Science Communication Tagged With: Cape Cod National Seashore, video

Coastal Stewardship and Climate Change: Protecting Shorebirds

by Christopher Green

I produced this episode of the Coastal Stewardship and Climate Change video series for Cape Cod National Seashore as the Science Communication Biotech. You can watch the video on Vimeo if you have received a password from me. I apologize for the inconvenience. My appointment ended before the video received approval, and I am not able to share it unless it is for the purpose of showing my work to a prospective employer.

Filed Under: Climate Change, Science Communication Tagged With: birds, Cape Cod National Seashore, shorebirds, video

Salt Marsh Tide Sequence

by Christopher Green

The ebb and flow of tides defines the rhythm of life in a salt marsh. Twice a day, a rush of salt water brings nutrients, sediments, and a whole host of organisms into the marsh. Most of the visitors come to feed. On occasion, a diamondback terrapin swims in during nesting season on her way to a dry nesting site in the low uplands bordering the marsh. When the tide ebbs away, the full-time residents of the marsh resume their low-tide activities. Note the scuttling fiddler crabs in the foreground of this time-lapse sequence made in a Wellfleet salt marsh two years ago today. For more information about estuaries and salt marshes on Cape Cod, visit: https://www.nps.gov/caco/learn/nature/estuaries-and-salt-marshes.htm#FindYourPark #NatureAtWork #NPS101

Posted by Cape Cod National Seashore on Tuesday, July 18, 2017

Filed Under: Science Communication Tagged With: Cape Cod National Seashore, GoPro, salt marsh, time lapse, video

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