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- The White Oak River: Introduction
- In A blackwater river from sea to source: The White Oak River transect, page 1
- One of the interesting things to do during field study of natural areas is to follow an environmental gradient across the landscape. This is particularly rewarding if your gradient extends up a river, as the exploration takes on the aura of a classic “search...
- By Dirk Frankenberg.
- The search for El Dorado
- The legend of El Dorado predates the arrival of Spaniards in South America. The Chibcha people of present-day Colombia apparently performed an annual ritual where the leader was coated in fine gold dust, which he then washed off in a lake during a solemn ceremony....
- By William M. Wisser.
- Piedmont sands and clays
- In Clays of the Piedmont: Origins, recovery, and use, page 1
- North Carolina's landmass has twice been subjected to major bouts of mountain building followed by erosion. The mountain building events have been described in another field trip in this series, the Roan Mountain Highlands. The remnants of the erosion of these...
- By Dirk Frankenberg.
- “Discoverie of Guiana”
- In Sir Walter Raleigh and South America, page 5
- Raleigh's 1596 account of his search of El Dorado became a sensation when it was published in England. The book describes Raleigh's motives of treasure hunting and empire building. Some excerpts with annotations are included below.*...
- By William M. Wisser.
- The search for El Dorado
- In Sir Walter Raleigh and South America, page 4
- The legend of El Dorado predates the arrival of Spaniards in South America. The Chibcha people of present-day Colombia apparently performed an annual ritual where the leader was coated in fine gold dust, which he then washed off in a lake during a ceremony....
- By William M. Wisser.
- Working in the fields
- In Rice farming and rural life in Vietnam, page 5
- Both men and women work in the wet-rice fields. Rural women living in highland Southeast Asia typically scale high mountains and do hard outdoor physical labor, which keeps them physically fit and strong. With one basket strapped at the waist and another larger...
- By Lorraine Aragon.
- A highland farmhouse
- In Rice farming and rural life in Vietnam, page 14
- The farm house shown here, located by a canal at Dong Ha, has a thatch and corrugated metal roof. Corrugated metal roofs are popular among some farmers in Southeast Asia because they are long lasting and fire resistant. They are, however, hotter, noisier,...
- By Lorraine Aragon.
- Coastal plain bottomland forest
- In Wetlands of the coastal plains, page 8
- Figure 6 illustrates a fine river to tour: the Northwest Cape Fear, as it appears in Pender County. The wetland type we see on the far bank is a coastal plain bottomland hardwood community. These communities develop on irregularly flooded habitats along rivers....
- By Dirk Frankenberg.
- Making salt
- In Northern and coastal Vietnam: Waterway settlements and Chinese influences, page 7
- This wide landscape view of salt-making fields along the coast south of Nha Trang shows sea water evaporating in some front and back fields, while salt is nearly ready for harvest in the middle fields. This type of salt production is a low-cost technology...
- By Lorraine Aragon.
- Estuaries in North Carolina: A primer
- Estuaries are places near the coast where freshwater and saltwater mix. Influenced by ocean forces yet partly sheltered from them, estuaries have unique and fascinating ecologies. This article explains what estuaries are, their geology and role in the larger...
- By Waverly Harrell and Jennifer Godwin-Wyer.
- North Carolina's lonely mountains
- In Lonely mountains: The monadnocks of the inner Piedmont, page 1
- One of the most striking sights on North Carolina's inner Piedmont is the solitary peaks or ridges that loom above the plateau's average elevation. Some of these are among the state's most visited parks: Hanging Rock, Pilot Mountain, Crowders Mountain, Stone...
- By Dirk Frankenberg.
- Why does North Carolina have so many, and so many kinds of, monadnocks?
- In Lonely mountains: The monadnocks of the inner Piedmont, page 2
- North Carolina has more than a dozen monadnocks scattered among its Blue Ridge mountains, and another ten or more on its Piedmont Plateau. These monadnocks formed during dramatic and diverse events that occurred as the state's crust formed. Most of these geologic...
- By Dirk Frankenberg.
- Sauratown Mountains
- In Lonely mountains: The monadnocks of the inner Piedmont, page 4
- One of the best places to see real monadnocks in North Carolina's Piedmont is in the Sauratown Mountains north of Winston-Salem in Stokes and Surrey counties. Here are pinnacles and two high ridges that stretch west southwest from Hanging Rock and include...
- By Dirk Frankenberg.
- Bedding planes
- In Lonely mountains: The monadnocks of the inner Piedmont, page 8
- The quartzite layers that make up the pinnacle of Pilot Mountain also comprise the erosion-resistant cap rocks of Hanging Rock and the two ridges that separate these pinnacles. This uniformity suggests a common origin of this material, and geologists theorize...
- By Dirk Frankenberg.
- Stone Mountain
- In Lonely mountains: The monadnocks of the inner Piedmont, page 12
- Quartzite is not the only erosion-resistant rock that has formed monadnocks on North Carolina's Piedmont. Another major rock type — granite — has also been responsible for monadnock formation. Granite is a granular rock made primarily of feldspar...
- By Dirk Frankenberg.
- Mount Everest

- In this photograph, Mount Everest can be seen in the background of a group of mountains in the Himalaya mountain range. It is mountain at the far left in the picture. Mount Everest is the tallest mountain in the world at 29,029 feet above sea level. Lotse...
- Format: image/photograph
- Field trips in context
- Opportunities abound in North Carolina for hands-on interdisciplinary learning experiences.
- Format: article
- By Lesley Richardson.
- Preparing English language learners for reading comprehension
- In Reading comprehension and English language learners, page 1
- Use KWL charts, circle maps and brainstorming webs, and concept maps to prepare English language learners, content-area learners, and all students for reading comprehension.
- By Ellen Douglas.
- The growth of tourism: Warm Springs
- In North Carolina in the New South, page 5.9
- Advertisement for Warm Springs (now Hot Springs) in Madison County, North Carolina, from the late nineteenth century. Includes historical commentary about the region, tourism, and nineteenth-century medicine.
- Format: pamphlet
- Commentary and sidebar notes by L. Maren Wood.
- Mentoring matters
- How mentors can serve as role models, helpers, and colleagues.
- By Evalee Parker.
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