When Scuba spotted something in the water, he helped retrieve research footage that had been lost for three years.
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
➡ Watch all clips of Expedition Raw here: http://bit.ly/WatchmoreExpeditionRaw
➡ Get More Expedition Raw on Youtube: http://bit.ly/NGExpeditionRaw
About Expedition Raw:
Surprises, challenges, and amazing behind-the-scenes moments captured by National Geographic explorers in the field.
Get More National Geographic:
Official Site: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo
Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
In April 2013 a team of National Geographic engineers packed up their cameras and headed to Miami. They were on an expedition to investigate deep-ocean creatures that exist hundreds of meters below the surface alongside plankton. Unfortunately, a harsh storm hit on the evening of May 2, several miles off the coast, and the engineers lost their Driftcams out to sea. Three years later, the engineering team was contacted by a Frenchman sailing across the Atlantic. Each year, Eric Visage travels from the Caribbean to his home in France accompanied by his little dog, Scuba. “My dog began to bark, and we saw this ball.” Visage had recovered one of the Driftcams—thousands of miles from where it had originally been deployed.
To learn more about the science and exploration supported by the nonprofit National Geographic Society, visit http://natgeo.org/grants.
Credits:
Series Producer: Chris Mattle
Footage: Alan Turchik, Christina Shepard, Dave McAloney, Eric Berkenpas, Pristine Seas
Associate Producer: Elaina Kimes
Video Producer/Editor: Monica Pinzon
How a Tiny Dog Saved a National Geographic Expedition | Expedition Raw
https://youtu.be/CKN-mLfkqi4
National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo
Tagged under: expedition raw,National Geographic,NatGeo,puppy,nat geo,wildlife,explore,discover,survival,science,nature,culture,documentary,exploration,dog,raw,expedition,cameras,explorer,camera,mechanical engineering,Miami,animals,research,seas,Alan Turchik,technology,YouTube,oceans,pets,plankton,weather,Neil Hammerschlag,driftcam,nat geo explorer,France,storms,field
Clip makes it super easy to turn any public video into a formative assessment activity in your classroom.
Add multiple choice quizzes, questions and browse hundreds of approved, video lesson ideas for Clip
Make YouTube one of your teaching aids - Works perfectly with lesson micro-teaching plans
1. Students enter a simple code
2. You play the video
3. The students comment
4. You review and reflect
* Whiteboard required for teacher-paced activities
With four apps, each designed around existing classroom activities, Spiral gives you the power to do formative assessment with anything you teach.
Quickfire
Carry out a quickfire formative assessment to see what the whole class is thinking
Discuss
Create interactive presentations to spark creativity in class
Team Up
Student teams can create and share collaborative presentations from linked devices
Clip
Turn any public video into a live chat with questions and quizzes
Tried out the canvas response option on @SpiralEducation & it's so awesome! Add text or drawings AND annotate an image! #R10tech
Using @SpiralEducation in class for math review. Student approved! Thumbs up! Thanks.
Absolutely amazing collaboration from year 10 today. 100% engagement and constant smiles from all #lovetsla #spiral
Students show better Interpersonal Writing skills than Speaking via @SpiralEducation Great #data #langchat folks!
A good tool for supporting active #learning.
The Team Up app is unlike anything I have ever seen. You left NOTHING out! So impressed!