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VIDEO

Video links from NRC Opening

Saturday, April 28th, 2012

Collection of videos about the opening of the Nature Research Center:

Zhara Church Forest Wall Tour

Friday, April 20th, 2012

Dr. “CanopyMeg” Lowman and Dr. Alemayehu Wassie Eshete guide us on a walk around the wall built at Zhara Church Rainforest in Ethiopia. The Zhara wall was possible thanks to efforts from scientists, donors, and the TREE Foundation.

This video contains excerpts from the documentary film “Church Forest” by Peter Eliot Buntaine & Greg Vander Veer. Find out more here: http://www.churchforest.com

Live video feed from the NC Museum of Natural Sciences and the 24 Hour Opening of the Nature Research Center

Friday, April 20th, 2012

One Planet/Many Worlds – Global Town Hall series presented by Time Warner Cable. Live from the NC Museum of Natural Sciences and the 24 Hour Opening of the Nature Research Center in Raleigh, NC. Featuring scientists, researchers and special guests from around the globe.

Watch live streaming video from naturalsciences at livestream.com

New museum almost ready to open in Raleigh

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

From NBC17.com:

RALEIGH, N.C. — Budding young scientists will soon have something new to explore in Raleigh – the new Nature Research Center (NRC).

The center makes up the new wing of the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences. It’s been a decade in the planning and two years under construction.

Read the full article

Nature Research Center Gala Preparations

Sunday, April 15th, 2012

Roland gives us a tour of the Nature Research Center (NRC) as preparations are underway for the Grand Opening Gala.

TREES R US

Thursday, April 5th, 2012

Video highlighting Dr. “Canopymeg” Lowman’s visit to canopies around the world — with an inside scoop on methods, tree canopies, and important issues surrounding research and conservation. Life at the Top is a global challenge!

CanopyMeg on Community – The TV Show – Feb, 3, 2012

Monday, March 19th, 2012

Dr. “CanopyMeg” Lowman was a guest on “Community — The TV Show” hosted by Annette Scherman on February 3, 2012. Appearing with Dr. Lowman was New College student Michael Long.

Meg Lowman talks about her recent travels and adventures including travel to Africa to help save the Church Forests of Ethiopia, forest conservation in India, and her work on the Nature Research Center (NRC), the new 80000 square-foot wing at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences.

Photos were displayed of the wall construction in Ethiopia that was accomplished with the help of Sarasota’s own TREE Foundation. The TREE Foundation is auctioning off the naming rights of new species of beetles and other organisms in Ethiopia. These funds go toward saving the last remaining fragments of forest in Ethiopia.

Dr. Lowman brings some art work and other interesting objects she has collected from her travels for some “show-and-tell” with Annette.

Michael Long talks about Meg’s influence on his decision to attend New College of Florida and his current studies which focus on bridging science with policy.

TREE Foundation website: http://www.treefoundation.com
Nature Research Center: http://naturesearch.org/

Wall Protecting the Zhara Church Forest in Ethiopia [VIDEO]

Sunday, February 12th, 2012

A look at the new wall and latrines that have been build at Zhara Church Rainforest in Ethiopia. Thanks to efforts from scientists, donors, and the TREE Foundation.

Citizen Scientist for the Treetops

Saturday, January 28th, 2012

My friend, Katherine Holden, is preparing for a global tree-climbing tour to draw attention to the plight of endangered forests around the globe. We will follow her from Brazil to India, as she takes on the canopy! Hooray for Katherine!

CHURCH FOREST – a documentary film about the Church Forests of Ethiopia

Monday, September 12th, 2011


Go to http://www.churchforest.com to find out how you can help get this film made.

A portion of all money raised for this film will be used for stone walls around the forests, local labor, hygiene installations to insure that the church biodiversity has appropriate stewardship, gates, and a truly sustainable approach.

DESCRIPTION:
The Ethiopia of ancient times was verdant, flourishing country, frequented by the Egyptians and Romans for its natural resources and for the knowledge of its inhabitants. Ethiopia was also one of the earliest countries to adopt Christianity as its national religion, and in 500 AD Coptic churches sprouted up among the woodland.

Modern-day Ethiopia has been largely deforested for agricultural needs and to harvest building materials. When looking at Ethiopia from an aerial vantage point, however, one can make out thousands of tiny, wooded sanctuaries amidst the sprawling, arid farmlands – vestiges of the ancient Ethiopian forest. In the center of each one of these green oases lies a church.

These Ethiopian Othodox Christian churches take it as one of their fundamental tenets to preserve these ‘church forests,’ and the parishioners consider them to be reconstructions of the Garden of Eden. Some of these churches, and likewise the sacred forests that surround them, are 1500 years old. These sites are of enormous cultural and historical significance and also play a key role in the ecology of Ethiopia – as food sources, water cycling sources, seed banks, and sole habitats for the majority of the entire region’s biodiversity. However, these church forests are rapidly disappearing, with some estimates predicting that they will vanish entirely within 5 years.

Enter Meg Lowman, affectionately called the mother of canopy research as one of the first scientists to explore this “eighth continent.” For 30 years, she has designed hot-air balloons and walkways for treetop exploration to solve the mysteries of the world’s forests. She has authored more than 100 peer-reviewed scientific publications, and her first book, “Life in the Treetops,” received a cover review in the New York Times Sunday Book Review.

This January, Meg will lead a team of researchers and conservationists to Ethiopia on a mission to work hand in hand with the local priests and parishioners to create and enact simple sustainable measures to forever preserve these sacred cultural and environmental havens. We will document the places, the people who live there, and the visitors who have come to help. This film will raise awareness about the church forests, the plight they are in, as well as highlight an unlikely story of collaboration between scientific and religious communities.




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