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Nixon Peabody Volunteer Day at Shore Road Sanctuary
In celebration of International Coastal Clean Up Day, Nixon Peabody LLP came to Shore Road Sanctuary in Cold Spring Harbor to assist the North Shore Land Alliance stewardship team…
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Invasive Species Awareness Week
Walk & Weed: In conjunction with New York State Invasive Species Awareness Week, volunteers removed ten garbage bags full of the invasive Artemisia vulgaris, also known as common mugwort…
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Meadow Cleanup with Girl Scout Troop #1805
Girl Scout Troop #1805 participated in a meadow cleanup at the North Shore Land Alliance Humes property in Mill Neck. In addition to removing porcelain-berry from the trees, they…
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Nearly 1,500 Elementary School Students Will Learn About Long Island’s Drinking Water
Nearly 1,500 Local Students Across Nassau and Suffolk Counties Will Learn About Long Island’s Drinking Water Through the Land Alliance’s Long Island Water Education Program in 2019 On a frigid winter morning, students at Ulysses Byas Elementary School filled plastic cups with layers of sand, clay and gravel to replicate the layers of Long Island’s aquifer. This interactive activity was part of our Long Island Water Education Program, which has educated nearly 6,000 students across Suffolk and Nassau counties since its inception in 2014 about the source of their drinking water (on Long Island: aquifers) and how land conservation protects Long Island’s water resources. “Long Island’s water is perhaps our community’s most precious and possibly most vulnerable resource,” said Lisa Ott, Land Alliance President & CEO. “We wanted to create a school program that educates the next generation about where their water comes from and what steps they can take to help protect it.” The Long Island Water Education Program is taught by Educator Karen Mossey to third through sixth grade students and comprises two one-hour interactive classroom sessions followed by an optional field trip to the Land Alliance’s Shore Road Sanctuary in Cold Spring Harbor or nearby natural area. In the classroom sessions, students learn that Long Island’s drinking water comes from an underground aquifer made of sand, gravel and clay, which acts as both a water filtration and storage system. By building mini aquifer models in plastic cups, students are able to study precipitation and runoff by simulating rain on permeable (sand and gravel) and impermeable (clay) surfaces and experiment to see how recharge and contamination happen – the smiling faces of the students at Ulysses Byas turned pensive when they observed how a single drop of red food coloring, the “pollutant,” rapidly contaminated all the water in their aquifer models. At Shore Road Sanctuary, students learn about coastal and grassland ecosystems and not only get to appreciate open space first hand but learn about the important connection between natural areas and Long Island’s drinking water. “Less than one percent of the water on our planet is drinking water,” said Mossey. “It is important to teach kids about their drinking water because the best way to protect something is to learn about it .” Expanding Our Impact in 2019 The Long Island Water Education Program is now offered in 16 schools, 13 of which have been added since the program launched five years ago. This year alone, the program will educate nearly 1,500 students in both public and private schools including Elizabeth M. Baker Elementary School in Great Neck, St. Patrick’s School in Huntington, Old Country Road Elementary School in Hicksville and the Lloyd Harbor Elementary in Lloyd Harbor. To learn more about our water education program, please contact the Land Alliance at 516-922-1028.
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