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Eddyville Sand Dunes Prairie - A Rare Place Indeed

Eddyville Sand Dunes Prairie is a patchwork of wind-blown sand, glacial till, associated wetlands, and woodlands. You can see evidence of all three of Iowa’s main plant communities as well as Earth’s systems interacting. The area is home to some of Iowa’s rarest plants and animals, including the pale green orchid, the eastern ornate box turtle, and the six-lined race runner. The biodiversity that can be witnessed there is truly unique. The area was formed as glaciers retreated from Iowa more than 10,000 years ago and has undergone both natural and human designed changes. 

Driving Question

  • How was the Eddyville Sand Dunes Prairie formed?

Probing Questions

  • What areas of the sand dunes represent each of the following Earth’s systems: hydrosphere, biosphere, geosphere, and atmosphere? 
  • How do the formation of the dunes and the management of the dunes represent Earth’s systems interacting with each other? 
  • What data could we collect from the dunes to provide evidence for feedback of two of Earth’s systems in the dunes?  

Classroom Suggestions

Students could:  

  • Identify different Earth systems in the Eddyville Sand Dunes.   
  • Infer how the parts of the dunes were formed by interactions between Earth’s systems.  
  • Make claims on how human activity could impact the Earth’s systems represented here in positive and negative ways.  
  • Design an investigation to provide evidence for their claims. 

Resources

Iowa Core Alignment

HS-ESS2-2:
Analyze geoscience data to make the claim that one change to Earth’s surface can create feedbacks that cause changes to other Earth systems

Credit Info

Submitted by Michelle Seddon

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