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Re: Dynamic Planet B/C

Posted: January 8th, 2015, 2:07 pm
by Unome
bobbuilder wrote:do you need to know a lot of mathematical equation. And are you allowed to bring anything in other than a pencil, calculator and 4 pages of cheat sheet
Most supervisors will probably allow you to bring an eraser and a handheld pencil sharpener (although it's better to just bring 3 pencils per person). As for math, you could check the test exchange to see what the tests could be like.

Re: Dynamic Planet B/C

Posted: January 8th, 2015, 3:55 pm
by azuritemalachite
Unome wrote:
bobbuilder wrote:do you need to know a lot of mathematical equation. And are you allowed to bring anything in other than a pencil, calculator and 4 pages of cheat sheet
Most supervisors will probably allow you to bring an eraser and a handheld pencil sharpener (although it's better to just bring 3 pencils per person). As for math, you could check the test exchange to see what the tests could be like.
Not a good idea. There aren't many tests available, but any Oceanography exams will do the same. Proctors allow pencils and erasers. A good idea is to use mechanical or just bring a ton of pencils. Make sure the cheat-sheets are front and back. It is very very good idea to remember or write down as many math equations pertaining with oceanography so any math question encountered will be a breeze. Also if available use a graphing calculator.

Re: Dynamic Planet B/C

Posted: January 9th, 2015, 3:38 pm
by rockster
I'm having a lot of trouble finding something for wave height because most of what I find is predictions... I'm just a mess trying to do this event, and my tournament is only three weeks away... I don't want to let my partner down, can someone please help, I'm desperate :?: :oops: :oops:

Re: Dynamic Planet B/C

Posted: January 10th, 2015, 1:59 pm
by SOnerd
I'm currently making my cheat-sheet, and I'm on the Representative Activities.
For the one that says to: "Identify topographic features of ocean regions using seafloor maps", I was thinking of adding what each feature looks like on a bathymetric map. Do you guys know where I could find pics of each (on a bathymetric map)?
[img]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a4/Bear_Seamount_guyot.jpg[/img]
[img]http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/news/weeklynews/may10/seamount.jpg[/img]
So far, I've only found those two.

Re: Dynamic Planet B/C

Posted: January 10th, 2015, 7:09 pm
by azuritemalachite
Hi! :D It's me again to help you with your questions! :)
rockster wrote:I'm having a lot of trouble finding something for wave height because most of what I find is predictions... I'm just a mess trying to do this event, and my tournament is only three weeks away... I don't want to let my partner down, can someone please help, I'm desperate :?: :oops: :oops:
So someone's confused here... To find wave height (wavelength and wave period, too...) you need to know wind speed (or time for tides), length of time the wind has blown and fetch (the distance that the wind traveled across open water). You need a formula to get the wave height for a specific wave so all will predictions unless you have some way to actually measure the wave height.
[img]http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/images/powrspec.gif[/img]
SOnerd wrote:I'm currently making my cheat-sheet, and I'm on the Representative Activities.
For the one that says to: "Identify topographic features of ocean regions using seafloor maps", I was thinking of adding what each feature looks like on a bathymetric map. Do you guys know where I could find pics of each (on a bathymetric map)?
[img]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a4/Bear_Seamount_guyot.jpg[/img]
[img]http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/news/weeklynews/may10/seamount.jpg[/img]
So far, I've only found those two.
Well for help on the cheatsheet, charts and diagrams help the most, then vocabulary/terms with descriptions. Luckily I found the time and put some effort and made this diagram on how to detect seafloor features using all sort of maps.
[img]http://scioly.org/wiki/images/thumb/7/73/Topo-ex.jpg/800px-Topo-ex.jpg[/img]
[img]http://scioly.org/wiki/images/a/a0/Marionlake.gif[/img] but go to the DP wiki for more info because I add a description there.

Re: Dynamic Planet B/C

Posted: January 15th, 2015, 10:39 am
by ScottA
JT016 wrote:Anyone know where I can find the Answer Key for the Southeastern Pennsylvania 2008 Regional test? I get a 404 error when I click on it :\
Also, I did Dynamic Planet(Glaciers) over the past 2 years, but the rules are different this year. The rule book says we'll have timed stations, but doesn't say how much time. I'm guessing the time will vary at regionals/invitationals, but I was wondering if anyone had any more info about the stations? Thanks in advance!

I found it at http://scioly.org/wiki/images/images/4/ ... _ocean.pdf

Re: Dynamic Planet B/C

Posted: January 15th, 2015, 11:40 am
by bernard
ScottA wrote:
JT016 wrote:Anyone know where I can find the Answer Key for the Southeastern Pennsylvania 2008 Regional test? I get a 404 error when I click on it :\
Also, I did Dynamic Planet(Glaciers) over the past 2 years, but the rules are different this year. The rule book says we'll have timed stations, but doesn't say how much time. I'm guessing the time will vary at regionals/invitationals, but I was wondering if anyone had any more info about the stations? Thanks in advance!

I found it at http://scioly.org/wiki/images/images/4/ ... _ocean.pdf
Thanks, ScottA. I fixed the link in the Test Exchange.

Re: Dynamic Planet B/C

Posted: February 8th, 2015, 1:39 pm
by SOnerd
I was browsing around for Topo Features stuff, and I found this (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_la ... _landforms) list of topographic features associated with oceans and coasts.
I'm planning to make a "glossary of topographic features" for my notes using this list (and a few others, as this list does not include landforms such as continental margin {etc}).
Does this sound like a good idea?

Re: Dynamic Planet B/C

Posted: February 8th, 2015, 6:19 pm
by azuritemalachite
SOnerd wrote:I was browsing around for Topo Features stuff, and I found this (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_la ... _landforms) list of topographic features associated with oceans and coasts.
I'm planning to make a "glossary of topographic features" for my notes using this list (and a few others, as this list does not include landforms such as continental margin {etc}).
Does this sound like a good idea?
Great idea: I'm probably gonna do the same thing...

Re: Dynamic Planet B/C

Posted: February 17th, 2015, 2:33 pm
by fishman100
Aside from buoyancy force, simple wave equations (v = (f)(lambda), etc) and some kinematics, what other equations are you guys putting on your sheet?

Also, I've been to 2 invitationals and both tests were vastly different. One was very representative of the "problem solving" approach outlined in the rules, and we had to make graphs, extrapolate data, calculate continental drift, etc. The other was mostly recall, with a few simple buoyancy force problems thrown in at the end. Like a lot of people here, I'm stuck trying to decide if I want to focus on math/problem solving or recall. Any tips?