This release (as well as image) is located at: http://hpwren.ucsd.edu/news/030331.html.

Last week, teachers from around the country paid a "remote" visit to the Anza-Borrego State Park. The teachers, who were attending the National Teacher Training Institute (NTTI) Conference in Irvine, CA participated in an underwater tour of Crystal Cove State Park and examined fossilized oyster beds in nearby Fish Creek - while sitting in a conference room in Irvine about 100 miles away.

The High Performance Wireless Research and Education Network (HPWREN) team assisted the California State Parks with the remote interactive presentations by providing the high-speed connectivity. "We set up a four-foot antenna on a tripod at Fish Creek, and used 45 Megabits-per-second to connect to an HPWREN backbone site on Mount Laguna - thanks to the San Diego County Sheriff's Department," explained HPWREN principal investigator Hans-Werner Braun. "From the Sheriff's facility at Mount Laguna, our link shoots to the Cuyamaca mountains, onto Mount Woodson, and finally to the San Diego Supercomputer Center at UC San Diego."

Additionally, a San Diego State University team comprised of geology graduate students deployed a local multi-megabit per second wireless network that extended the connectivity a mile or so futher into the desert from the Fish Creek Base camp. This LAN involved multiple sites, high resolution and video cameras, as well as assorted environmental sensors.

"The high-speed wireless link provided by HPWREN can provide students in California with access to an extraordinary park resource that school buses simply can't get to," said Alan Friedman, Chief Information Officer for the California Department of Parks and Recreation in Sacramento. L. Louise Jee, GIS specialist at the Anza-Borrego State Park head quarters adds that "the possibilities of remote wildlife monitoring in this large park no longer seem so impossible to dream about."

Next month, the remote presentations will be repeated for participants at the George Wright Society Cultural Resources 2003 Joint Conference. This upcoming conference, which is entitled "Protecting Our Diverse Heritage: The Role of Parks, Protected Areas, and Cultural Sites", will take place at a conference center located in coastal San Diego (about 60 miles from the site of the Anza-Borrego presentations). The Cultural Resources 2003 is an interdisciplinary effort by the George Wright Society and the National Park Service.

Additional photographs regarding the event are located at http://hpwren.ucsd.edu/Photos/20030321/ and http://hpwren.ucsd.edu/Photos/20030322/.

The High Performance Wireless Research and Education Network (HPWREN) team is creating, demonstrating, and evaluating a non-commercial, prototype, high-performance, wide-area, wireless network in San Diego county. The NSF-funded network includes backbone nodes on the UC San Diego campus and a number of "hard to reach" areas in San Diego county. Not only is HPWREN used for network analysis research, but the network also provides high-speed Internet access to field researchers from several disciplines (geophysics, astronomy, ecology) and educational opportunities for rural Native American learning centers and schools. The HPWREN project is based on work sponsored by the National Science Foundation and its ANIR division under Grant Number ANI-0087344.