We have compiled all of our enrichment group`s work from 2013
Transcription
We have compiled all of our enrichment group`s work from 2013
Wagoner Elementary School 2013-2014 Popcorn Pages 4-5 Frogs and Toads Pages 6-7 Creepy Cool Spiders Pages 8-9 Birds Pages 10-11 Insects Pages 12-13 Chocolate Pages 14-17 The Arctic Pages 18-19 Antarctica Pages 20-27 Dinosaurs Pages 28-31 Volcanoes Pages 31-32 2 Doing research. Making volcanoes. Setting up Wagoner’s new laptops. 3 Types of Popcorn By Kali and Shaniya Let’s talk about kinds of popcorn! The butterfly popcorn kernel is big and fluffy. The mushroom popcorn kernel is shaped like a ball. Some white popcorn has less noticeable hulls. Kettle corn has a sweet taste. Microwave popcorn comes in a bag so you can put it in the microwave. Sometimes you can add some of your seasonings. Now you know about kinds of popcorn. How Farmers Grow Popcorn! By Jaylinn, Vanessa, and Promise Here’s how popcorn gets to the market. Farmers plant corn in a field with a plastic covering so the corn does not get eaten by animals. The corn comes through the plastic. Farmers cut the plastic and pull it up so the corn can grow. In fall corn is ready to harvest. Farmers use machines to pick the ears off the plants. This is how popcorn grows! 4 Life Cycle of Popcorn By Jacob, Salvador, and Zion This is the lifecycle of popcorn. Popcorn seeds are planted after frost. They grow tassels. The leaves grow 15 feet long. They grow 7 to 10 feet tall. They grow ears. They grow hundreds of kernels. You can eat the kernels. Then the lifecycle of corn starts over again. Explosive Popcorn By Russell and Vanessa Have you heard popcorn is explosive? When popcorn kernels go past 450 degrees it redlines and that means it explodes. There has to be a lot of pressure on the popcorn for it to explode. The kernels are washed, dried and tested to see if they contain the right moisture. Pop corn needs to be heated evenly so it can pop. The steam makes the inside so big that it pops. That is why popcorn is explosive. History of Popcorn By Ruize and Deshaun This is what we learned about popcorn history. The oldest popcorn is 5,600 years old. Popcorn grew in Mexico first. Popcorn also grew in China and India hundreds of years ago. Popcorn was important to the American Indians. The colonists ate their popcorn like cereal with milk. Popcorn was popular from the 1800s until the 2000s in the United States. People have been eating popcorn for a long time! 5 By Torrin and Joseph Types Habitat The biggest toad is the goliath frog. The smallest frog is as small your finger nail. The strawberry poison dart frog is no bigger than a finger nail. The cane toad is very deadly. A bull frog’s deep pitched call can be heard from more than a quarter mile away. Bullfrogs live in fresh water ponds, lakes and marshes. The cane toads live in Australia north America and south America. The smoky jungle frog lives in Amazon rain forest, and south America. The Darwin frogs can be found in south America. The mountain chicken frog use hollowed out logs for burrows. Sources Illinois Department of Natural Resources BBC Nature Wildlife National Geographic Kids 6 Food A cane toad will eat anything that will fit in its mouth. American bull frogs food is spiders grasshoppers and flies. A poison dart frog eats fruit flies ants termites young crickets, and tiny beetles. Red eyed tree frogs food is Predators Some frogs are poison so they can protect them self from predators. The frogs that are poisons have bright colors so there predators know there poisons A red eyed tree frog can camouflage it self so it can protect its self from predators. One of the predators of a frog is birds. If a cane toad is eaten by a predators will dye because it is poisons. Reproduction A strawberry poison dart frog carries her tadpoles. A frog or toad starts out as egg then the frog or toad is a tadpole. After being a tadpole they turn in to a baby frog or toad. After they are baby’s they are a grown up frog or toad. 7 Author and Illustrator: Jaylinn and Jacob Types Predators Black widow have a hour glass on them. Northern black widows are different colors than males. Raft spiders float on water. The female goliath spiders fangs are longer than cheetah claws. A black widows poison is 15 times stronger than a rattle snake’s. Raft spiders build webs under water so in can catch its prey. The golden crab spider has poison in its prey. Most spiders are camouflaged. Some people eat spiders. 8 Look Habitat Spiders have eight legs. They have eight eyes. Female black widow spiders are darker then males. Tarantulas are large and very hairy. Black widows live almost everywhere. Tarantulas live in the jungle. Tarantulas live in burrows. Crab spiders live in gardens. Spiders live in webs. Reproduction Food They lay there eggs in sacks. The female black widow lays 200 eggs. Some girl spiders kill there mates to lay eggs. When girl spiders lay eggs 500 to 1000 spiders can hatch. A black widow lays 200 eggs. Wolf spider carry their hatchlings. Some spiders eat rats or other little creatures. The red crab spider eats ants. The crab spider looks invisible so it can catch its prey. Tarantulas main prey is insects and frogs toads and mice. Goliath spiders eat lizards insects and bugs. Sources: Illinois Department of Natural Resources BBC Animals National Geographic 9 By Khareah and Kali Types There are 9,000 bird species. Penguins live in freezing cold whether. Flamingos live in warmer regions. Red tailed hawks hunt from the air. An ostrich does not fly it runs. Habitat Look All birds live in different places. The American kestrel can be found around forest edges. Peafowl live in South Asia and is brought to Sri Lanka. Some wood peckers live in Mexico. The male birds and the female birds are different. The long eared owl male dose not have long ears. The short eared owl male is yellow. The male Merlin is different from the female Merlin the male is yellow the female is white. The female Mississippi kite is gray but the male is black. 10 Reproduction Birds lay their eggs in a nest. Parent birds warm the eggs with their bodies .When the eggs hatch the chicks are helpless. The parents feed and care for the chicks .The chicks grow up and learn how to fly. The young birds now have to find their own food. The mother protects her baby. Puffins protects their baby by making there nest under ground . The emperor penguin lays one single egg and leaves and then dad takes care of baby egg. Food Many birds eat and hunt for different things. Penguins eat tiny shrimp like animals. Snowy owls hunt for rodents , rabbits, birds, and fish . Plovers will run into swarms of flies and eat them. Flamingos feathers change when they eat different color food . Puffins eat small fish such as sand, eels , and herring which they hunt under water. Sources: Illinois Department of Natural Resources National Geographic 11 Illustrated by Angelina swan Written by Russell and Angelina Types This is an article about insects. The Hawaiian cranfly does not have wings. Chan’s mega stick is very long. Honey bees bring pollen to flowers. Dung beetles roll balls with soil. If an ant queen lays too many eggs the ants will kill the eggs before they hatch. These are some types of insects. Look These are some facts about looks of insects. Arthropods have skeletons on the outside of there bodies. Insects have pairs of jointed legs. The three parts of an insect are The head, abdomen and the thorax Not all insects have wings. Ants are fuzzy but there so small you can’t see the fur. 12 Habitat Insects can live all over the world. Honey bees can live all over the world inside hives. Monarch butterflies can live in the South or North America. Cicadas live in South America and North America. Praying Mantids can live all over the world too in tropical areas. Food Reproduction All insects come from an egg. Insects lay there eggs in dung that they rolled. A honey bees queen’s job is to lay eggs. Predators These are some of the predators of insects. The praying mantid’s predators are bats, rodents, birds, and spiders. A lady bug’s predator is a bird. Elitents eat dung beetles. Insects can eat almost every thing. Most insects can eat other insects. Dung Beetles eat dung or animal waste. Praying Mantises eat other bugs. Ladybugs eat Aphids. Honey Bees eat honey from pollen and nectar from flowers. Sources: Department of Natural Resources National Geographic Reading Eggs BBC 13 By Salvador, Russell, Joseph, Jaylinn, Jacob, Zion, Kali, Angelina, and Promise About Chocolate Chocolate starts of as a bean and the bean is inside a orange pod and the pod is hanging on a tree. Then the people who make chocolate pick the orange pod. They cut the orange pod with a machete with a very hard whack. When the cacao are done they put them in to a pile or boxes. It takes a week until the cacao bean dries and it turns purple. 14 Delicious Nutty Popcorn Fudge Recipe 1 Package (8 oz) semisweet chocolate chips 1 can (14 oz) sweetened condensed milk 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 4 cups freshly popped popcorn 1 cup (silvered) almonds, toasted 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract Directions 1. Line a 9 ½ ” x 13 ½ pan with foil set aside 2. In large saucepan over low heat melt chocolate chips, condensed milk and butter, stirring until smooth. Remove from heat stir in popcorn , nuts, and vanilla 3. Spread mixture evenly in prepared pan. Chill 2 hours or until firm remove from pan and cut into squares EASY OREO TRUFFLES 1(16 ounce ) package OREOs 1 (8 ounce) cream cheese 2 (8 ounce) melted chocolate Crush 9 cookies to fine crumbs in food processor reverse for later. Crush remaining 36 cookies to fine crumbs. Place in medium bowl. Add cream cheese. Mix until well blended. Roll cookie mixture into 42 balls about 1 inch in diameter. Dip balls in chocolate place on wax paper covered baking sheet. Sprinkle reversed cookie crumbs Refrigerate until firm about 1 hour. Source: http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/EasyOREO-Truffles/Detail.aspx?evt19=1 Source: http://www.delish.com/ 15 How to Make Chocolate 2 cups cocoa powder ¾ cup butter softened at room tempter ½ cup sugar 2/3 cup milk room tempter ¼ tsp salt ¼ cup powder sugar 1 cup water 16 Yummy Chocolate Brownies 1 cup of butter or margarine 4 squares of unsweetened chocolate 4 eggs 2 cups white sugar 2 teaspoons vanilla extract 1 1/2 cups all purpose flour 1 teaspoon baking powder pinch of salt 1. Put the water in a pot and leave it boiling. 2. Combine the cocoa powder and softened the butter in a bowl. Mix it until you have a smooth paste. Use a fork to squish it to eliminate lumps. 3. Add the cocoa powder mix to the boiling water and stir. Allow the temperature to rise back up. Again it should be hot but not boiling. 4. Put the mix in to a bowl. 5. Sift sugar and powder sugar together in a separated bowl. 6. Add milk stir until smooth 7. Pour the mixture in thin layers across the bottoms of various containers. Since the chocolate will take the shape of the containers a rectangular casserole dish will work well for a rectangular bar. You can also use candy molds. 8. Harden overnight in refrigerator or freezer. 1. Preheat 350 rub grease over a 9 x 13 inch baking pan. 2. Melt the butter in a sauce pan over medium heat on the stovetop. After the butter is melted, take it off the heat and stir in the chocolate until it is melted and mixed in. Add the eggs one at a time, stirring thoroughly. Then add the sugar and vanilla, stirring the mixture until smooth. 3. In a separate bowl, mix the flour, salt, and baking powder. Gently pour the butter, chocolate, and sugar mix the flour and stir it until the flour is completely wet. 4. Pour the mixture into the pan and spread it evenly. 5. Bake for 25 to 30 minutes until the brownies begin to pull away from the sides of the pan. 6. Let the brownies cool in the pan before you cut them. Make 12 brownies. Source: WikiHow Source: All About Chocolate by Robert Charles Five Minute Fudge 1 can sweetened condensed milk 1 bag chocolate chips Optional: Fruit or nuts to mix in, flavoring like vanilla or orange 1. Combine the sweetened condensed milk and chocolate chips in a microwave safe bowl. 2. Microwave on high in one minute bursts, stirring in between, until the chocolate melts into the milk. It shouldn't take more than three minutes. 3. Stir in any flavoring or mix ins you're using. 4. Pour into a pan or dish lined with foil or parchment paper. It will be thick, it's up to you whether you want to spread it evenly in the pan or let it stay as you poured it. 5. Chill until set, then cut into pieces. Store in the refrigerator. Source: http:// eatthefreelunch.blogspot.com/2013/12/ five-minute-fudge.html How to make chocolate in the microwave 4tbsp cocoa powder, any kind will do 3tbsp powdered sugar 1tbsp butter (salted of unsalted) 1. Put cocoa power, powdered sugar and butter in a microwave – safe bowl. 2. Microwave until butter melted. 3. Mix ingredients. Put in the microwave again. Mix again. 4. Freeze until firm. Source: WikiHow How to Make Chocolate with Cocoa Powder 2 cups cocoa powder ¾ cup butter, softened 2/3 cup of milk ¼ teaspoon of salt 1 cup of water 1. Place the cocoa powder and softened butter in bowl and stir. 2. Place the chocolate mixture on top of the saucepan or double boiler, and bring the water to just simmer, over low heat 3. Stir paste and add milk and sugar gradually. Mix well until the pasties smooth and creamy. 4. Put it in the fridge until the chocolates 5. Enjoy! Source: WikiHow 17 By Torrin, Joseph, Claudia, Lawrence Resources Polar Explorers written by Susan Mansfield Polar Animals written by Susan Mansfield The Arctic written by Susan Mansfield Polar regions of the world written by Elizabeth Austin The Inuit Northern Living written by David Meissner Plight of the Polar Bear written by Ned Jensen Alaska the Last Frontier written by Dane Dehler Geography Animals The Arctic ocean is the smallest of the world’s oceans. In most of the winter the Arctic ocean freezes over to form a layer of sea ice. The tundra is in the southern areas of the Arctic. When the ice melts in summer the tundra has many shallow lakes. The lakes form because the water cannot drain into oceans. The process in which an iceberg breaks off from a glacier is called calving. The North Pole sits in the middle of the Arctic ocean which is covered by a layer of ice called an ice cap. When the tundra turns into a bog during the summer a billion of mosquitoes swarm over the land. Some scientists believe that polar bears cover their black noses with their paws to make them harder to spot as they hunt for seals. Arctic terns can fly over 20,000 miles in their lifetime. Arctic foxes live for 3-6 years in the wild. Caribou shed their thick winter coats in the early summer. Arctic foxes give birth to up to 14 pups in burrowed dens. Polar bear babies stay with their mother for about two and a half years. Polar bears can smell an animal that died 20 miles away. Caribou antlers can get as long about 3 feet long. 18 Environment The polar regions are some of the last areas of wilderness in the world but they are being threatened. Sometimes people leave behind garbage and pollution that harm the environment. The Earth is also warming up. Permafrost is melting all over the Arctic some times causing the ground to collapse. No one knows what this warming will do to the polar animals. Oil companies build wells in the Arctic. Most nations of the world have agreed to try to protect polar regions. Climate The sun light hits directly at the equator and less directly at the poles. During the winter, the sun does not shine on the Polar Regions at all, and without sunlight, there’s no heat. In the summer in the Arctic temperatures only reach 35° F on the ice sheet. The Arctic helps cool the rest of the planet. Winds and ocean currents take cold arctic air and water to other parts of the world. This helps keep global temperatures stable. People History Roald Amundsen was the first person to try to go to the Arctic. Robert Edwin Peary was the first person to get to the Arctic. James Clark Ross made important discoveries in the Arctic. In 1831 Ross and his uncle, Sir John Ross, explored northern Canada in search of the magnetic North Pole. They found it in August 1831. People can live the Arctic and live in igloos and also skin animals for jackets. That keeps them warm. The people who live in the Arctic have to stay very warm but when they are done working and hunting they play. The native American tribe in the Arctic was called Inuit. They were the first people to live in Alaska. Native people burned whale fat to keep warm. The Europeans went to Alaska in 1741. It was too cold to go because they did not have proper clothes. Some people did not get to Alaska until 1896 because gold was found and people went to get rich. On March 27, 1964 an earthquake killed 131 people. 19 People Geology People in Antarctica are ether researchers, tourists or miners. Miners mine for oil in Antarctica. Researchers are the ones that study Antarctica. Tourists are people who visit Antarctica for the wildlife. Twenty-five thousand people visit Antarctica each year! Antarctica is cold and covered in ice but it wasn't always like this. Antarctica used to be in the north but it broke apart from the north land and slowly floated south 180 million years ago. BY JAOCB & ZION!!!! Geography Antarctica is so cold because it is at the bottom of the world. The bottom of the world is very far from the equator. The sun warms the earth at the equator. Since Antarctica is so far from the equator it is super cold. The average temperature is usually 76°F. The lowest temperature in Antarctica was -130°F. 20 ANIMALS There are many animals in Antarctica. One of them is the penguin. Penguins live in the seas of Antarctica. Penguin have oily waterproof layers of fat called blubber. Penguins eat krill. Krill are little shrimp like animals that live in the sea. Krill lay up to 10,000 eggs at a time. There are 85 different species of krill. Krill can survive for up to 200 days without eating. Environmental Problems History Antarctica is important to the whole world and people are destroying it if they keep doing it animals will be extinct. People in Antarctica are breaking the Antarctic treaty. People in Antarctica are mining and people banned mining in Antarctica years ago . The mining in Antarctica is destroying the animals of Antarctica's home. When ships come to Antarctica for oil the ships break ice and where animals live. Tourists keep leaving trash and garbage all over Antarctica. Animals are choking on all of the garbage they are leaving behind. Pollution in Antarctica can lead to global warming. In 1900 Argentina, Australia, Chile, France, Britain, New Zealand, and Norway wanted Antarctica so they all signed the Antarctic treaty. The Antarctic treaty makes it so nobody can litter on Antarctica in there states and that since they now all own Antarctica they cant dump thrash on Antarctica or test weapons. The Antarctic treaty is now signed in 46 countries. The ice in Antarctica is over 100 years old! Antarctic Explorers Sir Douglas Mawson was an Antarctic explorer. He was born in 1882. Sir Douglas Led the British, Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition. He mapped more than 2,000 miles by ship and seaplane! Until 1996 Sir Douglas appeared on the Australian 100 dollar bill. He died in 1958. SOURCES Antarctica by Susan Mansfield Polar Animals by Susan Mansfield Polar Explorers by Susan Mansfield Polar Regions of the Earth by Elizabeth Austin Penguins by Kira Freed 21 Research Sources Antarctica by Susan Mansfield Polar Explorers by Susan Mansfield Polar Animals by Susan Mansfield Polar Regains of the Earth by Elizabeth Austin There are over 80 research stations in Antarctica. The green light is the Aurora Australia it appears when solar wind mixes with gasses in the air at the South Pole. Between 20022005,scientists discovered 76 sponge species in the seas off Antarctica. Almost all of Antarctica is permanently covered with an ice cap, so there are a few plants. The South Pole sits in the continent of Antarctica. Animals The rock hopper penguin will slap you and bite you if you try to touch it. Emperor penguins are the only warmblooded animal that spend winter in Antarctica . Krill are penguins favorite food. Krill live in Antarctica in the water they are krill are pink and are a tiny shell fish like animal. Emperor penguins are the fastest swimmers and are the tallest penguin in the world they are 4 feet tall. History Sir Doglegs Mason was an Australian Antarctica explorer and geologist. Until 1996 Sir Douglas Mawson appeared on the Australian 100 dollar bill. Between 1907 and 1931 Mason Claimed millions of Antarctica territory for Australia. . 22 People Geography About 25,000 tourists visit Antarctica each year. They are only allowed to visit in November and March. On the other hand, as more people visit the risks of the environment getting damaged increase. Tourism allows people to experience the importance of Antarctica. People should visit Antarctica to learn how to protect this special environment. About ninety-eight percent of Antarctica is covered by an ice sheet. Antarctica has two seas, Ross and Weddle seas. The eastern part of the land is longer and mostly above sea level. It is 770 miles from the tip of the Antarctic peninsula. The transatlantic mountains divide the content into east greater and west lesser Antarctica. In 2000, an ice berg the size of France broke off Ross ice shelf. It was called b-15. It was a huge piece of ice . Environment Climate The polar regions are some of the last areas of wilderness in the world. Antarctica should not be mined because it is one of the worlds last natural wilderness. Building roads and houses for the tourists destroy the wild life habits and icepacks. In winter sea ice freezes. These ice pads often trap ships. Any minerals in Antarctica , such as coal or gas are buried miles under the thick ice sheet. The winter temperature at the south pole is - 76 F. in 1983. Antarctica is the coldest, driest, and windiest place in the world. After sunset at the south pole the sun will rise in 6 months time. It has not rained in the Dry Valleys of Antarctica two million years. The winter lasts 6 months in Antarctica. 23 By, ShaNiya, Jaylinn and Promise Antarctica Animals Have you ever went to Antarctica? Antarctica is a continent that surrounds the South Pole. Antarctica has a variety of wildlife from tiny krill to seals and whales. There are no trees in Antarctica. In summer Antarctica covers about 5 million square miles. Every winter when sea ice forms around its coats Antarctica doubles in size. This is one million square miles larger than the U.S.A. Do you know about the animals in Antarctica? Penguins, seals and whales have a thick layer of fat called blubber that keeps them warm. Many polar animals have thick fur or blubber so they don't get cold. Some fish have special blood that stops them from freezing. Spring comes in late September south of the equator. This is when most penguins move onto land to start families. They build nests in huge nesting areas called rookeries. Resources Antarctica by Susan Mansfield Polar Animals by Susan Mansfield Polar Explorers by Susan Mansfield Penguins by Kira Freed Polar Regions on earth by Elizabeth Austin 24 History Geography Antarctica is the only place in the world that does not belong to one country. In the early 1900s, Argentina, Australia, Chile, France, Britain, New Zealand, and Norway all wanted parts of towns in Antarctica. Antarctica was once part of Gandwana. Between 2002-2005 scientists discover 76 sponge species in the seas off Antarctica. In 1959, these countries signed the Antarctica Treaty, so they all could use and look after Antarctica. Together six other countries also signed the treaty–Belgium, Japan, South, Africa, the USA and USSR. Antarctica is one of the polar regains that include the highest, driest, coldest, and windiest land on Earth. There are places on Erath where the ice never melts. About 98% of covered by an ice sheet. The Transantarticitic Mountains divide the continent into east (Greater) and west (Lesser) Antarctica. Antarctica has 2 seas—the Ross and Weddell seas. People Climate About 25,000 tourists visit Antarctica each year. Robert Scott was a British naval officer and Antarctica explorer. He also explored the Ross Ice Shelf, and took the first hot air balloon flight in Antarctica. When Scott reached the south pole on January 4,1912, he was distressed to find a man had arrived over a month before. James Clark Ross was a British polar explorer. Antarctica is a icy cold continent that surrounds the South Pole. Antarctica is a desert because it is low on rainfall. There are two main seasons in Antarctica, winter and summer. When it snows, winds come up to 190 m.p.h. Bad snow storms are called white outs. In the summer, the sun shines for 24 hours a day, but the temperature usually stays below 34*f. 25 Introduction Between 2003-2005 scientists discovered 76 sponge species in the seas in Antarctica. Antarctica is the only place in the world that does not belong to any country. The oldest Antarctica ice core ever drilled contained snow and soil from 740,000 years ago. The ice core was two miles long. In 2000, an iceberg the size of France broke off the Ross ice shelf. It was called B-15. People These are some of the people that visited Antarctica. Some scientists live in Antarctica to discover new things. If you ever build buildings, roads or houses in Antarctica you will be destroying animals’ homes. A lot of people do not live in Antarctica because it is freezing cold. Scientists think that some of Antarctica’s rocks have been folded because they look strange. About 25,000 people visit Antarctica to discover what is new. These were some of the people that visited Antarctica. Geography This is what we learned about geography in Antarctica. About 98 percent of Antarctica is covered in a ice sheet . Antarctica is near the south pole. Mountains divide the continent into east greater and west lesser Antarctica. Antarctica has two seas the Ross and Weddell seas . In Antarctica the land is colder than the water. 26 ANTARCTICA By Helen, Vanessa, and Angelina Sources Polar Explorers by Susan Mansfield Antarctica by Susan Mansfield Polar regions of the earth by Elizabeth Austin Penguins by Kyra Freed National Geographic Polar Animals by Susan Mansfield Animals These are interesting facts about animals that live in Antarctica. Penguins live in Antarctica because it is very cold and there is food. Penguins are meat eaters they eat fish squid and 85 kinds of krill. Penguins live in Antarctica and they also can’t fly. Krill live in Antarctica’s Ocean but they have to be careful so that other animals don’t eat them. These were the interesting fact about the animals in Antarctica. Climate This is what we learned about the climate in Antarctica. A lot of strong winds, called katabatics, blast Antarctica at speeds up to 190 mph. There are two main seasons in Antarctica. Winter lasts for six months and parts of Antarctica are in total darkness. The wind , snow and icy temperature often cause blizzards. In the summer the sun shines for 24 hours a day but the temperature usually stays bellow 34 °F. Antarctica is a desert because of its low rainfall. It get less than two inches each year. The Sahara desert in Africa receives more rainfall then this. History This is the history of Antarctica. In the history of Antarctica it was once part of Gwandana. The heavy layers of snow were slowly pressed into ice. The temperature in Antarctica got colder everywhere and the trees disappeared and it became covered in snow. This was the history of Antarctica. Environment These are the Interesting facts we learned about Antarctica’s environment . Antarctica has rocks the size of cars. Antarctica is about four million years old ! There are caves in the snow of Antarctica. Coal has been found in the mountains of Antarctica. In winter sea ice freezes and some ships get stuck. 27 DINOSAURS ARE COOL!!! By Khareah Dinosaurs lived on Earth 165 million years ago. The world they lived in was very different from ours, it was warm and wet. None of the dinosaurs knew what or who a person was because people didn’t live in their world. Tyrannosaurus was the scariest and it was a hunter. It also had big and sharp teeth. It had the sharpest teeth ever. The biggest carnivore is T.rex and it is humongous. The earliest dinosaurs were meat eaters too. The animals that eat meat are carnivores. Some carnivores lived alone. They also hunted other dinosaurs and they scared them away from their food too. Some hunted in groups. Most dinosaurs were plant eaters. Animals and dinosaurs that eat plants are called herbivores. The biggest herbivore was the Diplodocus. There were also big ones and little ones too. The dinosaurs that were herbivores ate huge amounts of food and they liked to eat together. A large herbivorous dinosaur spent all day eating. An Apatosaurus ate hundreds of pounds of food every day. Many of the dinosaurs swallowed stones. The stones stayed in their stomachs because it helped grind the tough leaves that the dinosaurs ate. Dinosaurs are interesting are interesting because there are a lot of things about them. Dinosaurs could eat stones! Dinosaurs could eat plants and they could eat lots of meats. That’s cool! Thompson, Lisa. Dinosaurs. Clayton South: Blake. 2008.Ebook. The Dinosaurs by Torrin Dinosaurs by Dylan Did you know that there are many dinosaurs? The T. Rex had serrated, cone-shaped teeth were most likely used to pierce and grip flesh. The T.Rex could eat up to 500pounds of meat in 1 bite. Ankylosaurus’s distinctive plates could also be used as weapons. The Brachiosaurus’s nostrils were on top of its head. The Diplodocus had one of the smallest of the dinosaur brains. I like learning about dinosaurs. There are many different Dinosaurs. Brontosaurs have a short tail and a long neck. Pterigon has wings on its back and they can fly. Spineosauros has spines on its back. Tritaratop was a dinosaur it had horns on its head. T-Rex was a dinosaur and it was a hunter. Stegasaurs was a dinosaur it had spines on its back. There are many different dinosaurs. When a dinosaur hatches the egg is hot when it is laid, and it is green. The egg starts to roll over next it starts pecking on the egg. Then it’s starting to cheep. And the dinosaur is born. The dinosaurs died by a meteor. Some Dinosaurs are were meat eaters or plant eaters. Dinosaurs are very cool. Tyannosaurs Rex. National Geographic. Web. Rohr, Ian. Dinosaur dig. Clayton South: Blake. 2005. Ebook. Pike, Kate.Dinosaurs. Readingeggs. 2014 Web. 28 Dinosaurs by Berdel Dinosaurs are big and small. There are many kinds of dinosaurs. Some dinosaurs are meat eaters and some are plant eaters. Dinosaurs are reptiles. Dinosaurs sink into the ground when they die. Their skin disintegrates and their bones are left behind. When the bones come up from the ground they turn into fossils. How they do that is by the sand presses them into the dirt. All dinosaurs lay eggs. Some dinosaurs lay green eggs. There were many kinds of dinosaurs long ago. Pike, Katy. Dinosaurs. Glebe: Blake. 2014. Ebook. Fossils. Brain Pop Jr. 1999-2014. Web. Great Facts About Dinosaurs By: Santana Some dinosaurs have sharp teeth to tear meat and others have flat teeth to eat leaves. The dinosaurs tooth fossil can tell what the dinosaur was eating. Dinosaurs that eat leaves are called herbivores and dinosaurs that eat meat are called carnivores. The velociraptor is a fast hunter but it is no bigger than three feet tall. A brontosaurus has a long neck so it can reach the leaves on the trees to eat. A brontosaurus stands on its back legs to reach the taller trees. Many of them swallow stones to help them grind the tough leaves. A tyrannosaurs was the scariest dinosaur. It was a hunter. There teeth are very sharp and they are as long as a pencil. Ttyrannosaur had a very good sense of smell and a strong neck. Many dinosaurs attacked other dinosaurs. When a dinosaur dies it gets cover with sediment then the soft part slowly decompose. Some dinosaurs freeze to death and they still have their hair and skin. Most of the dinosaur fossils were found on a hill in Canada. Every dinosaur is a reptile. No one knows what color a dinosaur is. Some dinosaurs use spikes to defend their selves. Every dinosaur laid eggs. Tareadaktall is the only dinosaur that has wings and can fly. A Tareadacktall is a lizard. Those are a lot of great facts about dinosaurs. Thompson, Lisa. Dinosaurs. Clayton south: Blake. 2008. EBook. Fossils. Brain pop jr. 1999-2014. Web. Damairius Long ago there were Dinosaurs. There were big ones and little ones. Some dinosaurs had horns on their head. There was this dinosaur called T. rex. It was a carnivore. It eats meat. Scientists found more than 700 different dinosaur bones. The biggest dinosaur, giganotosaurus, was so big but it had a brain as big as a banana. Some dinosaurs could fly. Its name was pterosaurs. It likes to eat fish. Some dinosaurs run fast. Dinosaurs are cool. Source: Reading Eggs 29 Dinosaur By Helen There were more than 900 different kinds of dinosaurs. All dinosaurs lay eggs. Dinosaurs come from the Greek language it means terrible lizard. Dinosaurs used spikes, horns, claws and armor to protect themselves. The environment has to be just right for fossils to form. Fossils are made from rock. When most dinosaurs die they break down or get eaten before they become fossils. Some fossils form when a living thing dies and it gets coved with clay and mud soil. A meteor shot Earth when dinosaurs died. Rohr, Ian. Dinosaur Dig. Clayton South: Blake. 2005. EBook. Fossils Brain Pop Jr. 1999-2014 Web. Bones Brain pop Jr.1999-2014 Web. Dinosaurs by Russell Dinosaurs are cool because they are giants. Dinosaurs died because of a meteorite hit and wiped them out and made them extinct. Dinosaur fossils are big and they are small. A dinosaur’s brain is about the size of a peanut. At one time dinosaurs used to rule Africa and the whole world and they were the main predator. The name dinosaur comes from a Greek word which means massive lizard. Dinosaurs were reptiles that lived millions of years ago. Scientist have found 700 different dinosaurs. Like the t-rexes and triceratops the T-rex is a carnivore that means they eat meat. Now you have learned about these incredible giants. Sources: Pike, Katy. Dinosaurs. Glebe: Blake. 2014. EBook. Thompson, Lisa. Dinosaurs. Clayton South: Blake.2008.Ebook. Fossils. Brain Pop J.R. 1999 -2014. Web. Lawrence Dinosaurs are cool because they are really big. The name dinosaur comes from Greek which means terrible lizard. From time to time massive space rocks have hit earth and the most famous is to believe to wipe out the dinosaurs. Scientist has found more than 700 different dinosaurs. T rexes are dinosaurs and they are hunters. Spinosaurus it is a dinosaur and it had spines on his back. Pteranodon was a dinosaur and it had wings so it was able to fly. The world dinosaurs had lived in was very different from ours it was very warm and wet most of the time. My favorite big dinosaur is a T rex Pike, Katy. Dinosaurs. Glebe: Blake. 2014. EBook. Fossils. Brain pop jr. 1999-2014.web. How the Earth Works: Asteroid Armageddon Science Channel, 2012 . Full Video. Discovery Education. Web. 6 May 2014. <http://www.discoveryeducation.com/>. Head Rush: Fire Sandwich Science Channel, 2010 . Full Video. Discovery Education. Web. 6 May 2014. <http://www.discoveryeducation.com/>. 30 Dinosaurs By Vanessa There were more than 900 kinds of dinosaurs. The word dinosaur comes from the Greek language. It means terrible lizard. Dinosaurs used spikes, horns, claws and armor to protect themselves. A large herbivorous dinosaur spent all day eating. Tyrannosaurus Rex was one of the largest meat eating dinosaurs that ever lived. All dinosaurs laid eggs. A baby Apatosaurus weighed about the same as a human baby and the adult 30 tons. The environment has to be just right for fossils to form. Dinosaur fossils are made of rock. When most dinosaurs die they break down or get eaten before they become fossils. Some fossils form when a living thing dies and it gets covered by sediment like mud, clay, sand, and soil. A meteor shot to earth when dinosaurs died. Rohr, Ian Dinosaur Dig. Clayton south: Blake Educate. 2005. EBook. Fossils Brain pop Jr 1999 2014. Web Bones Brain pop Jr 1999 2014. Web Christian Dinosaurs are animals that lived over two hundred million years ago. Many scientists think dinosaurs are very rare. T-Rex is a dinosaur that hunts for food. Dinosaurs ruled the world for 160 million years. 65 million years ago. Many dinosaurs are strange creatures that lived long ago. Dinosaurs are four legged really big reptiles. They lived millions of years ago. Would something very old and very dead make you happy? Pike, Katy. Dinosaurs. Glebe: Blake. 2014. EBook Fossils. Brain pop Jr. 1999-2014.Web education.com How the Earth Works: Asteroid Armageddon Science Channel, 2012. Full Video. Discovery Education. Web. 6 May 2014. <http://www.discoveryeducation.com/>How the Earth Works: Asteroid Armageddon Science Channel, 2012. Full Video. Discovery Education. Web. 6 May Dinosaurs By: Leah Did you know that there are 900 different dinosaurs? People find dinosaur fossils. Some people can go and get dinosaur bones and bring them to the museum so people can see them in the place. Did you know that dinosaurs are a living thing but they die. You should learn more about dinosaurs. Source: Reading Eggs 31 By Jacob, Kali, London, Joseph, Angelina, Jaylinn, Promise, Claudia, and Salvador Introduction Plates There are 500 active volcanoes in the world but only 10 to 20 erupt a year. Volcanoes are all over the planet. Some volcanoes are in Antarctica, New Mexico, and Washington State. Earth's crust is made up of separate pieces, know as tectonic plates. These plates fit together like a giant jigsaw puzzle. Volcanoes form when these plates interact. Volcanoes can destroy and create land. Volcanoes build 88% of the earth. The first volcanoes appeared about 3.5 billon years ago. The earth has a surface that is made of many sheets of rock called tectonic plates. Years ago the plates were all one. Tectonic plates are giant pieces of the crust of the earth. A tectonic plate is a giant piece of rock that is on top of the earth’s mantle. Plates are a giant puzzle but made of rock. A lot of plates make continents and ocean floor. There are 15 Tectonic plates. Continental plates are under land and oceanic plates are in the ocean. A volcano is a mountain that opens downward to a pool of molten rock below the surface of the earth. Volcanoes are formed when hot magma pushes its way through Earth's crust. It is so hot that rock melts into a liquid called magma. When pressure builds up the molten rock moves up through the conduit. The conduit works like a pipe that goes up through the mountain that holds the molten rock as it moves up. When the chamber fills up it and causes a volcanic eruption. The lava comes through the vent of the volcano which is like it’s throat Magma erupts as lava. Black ash covers the volcano. The lava hardens into rock. When lava meets water it creates steam, ashes and stone. People live near volcanoes for a variety of reasons. They often find nutrient-rich soil for farming in these regions or wonderful hot springs where they can take relaxing baths. Earth's crust is made separate pieces, known as tectonic plates. Some tectonic plates move away from each other. A divergent boundary is when two plates move away from each other. A transformed boundary is when two plates move across each other. Plates that are moving against each other are called convergent boundary. Sometimes some plates disappear and a new one will appear. In some places the edges of the earth’s tectonic plates are cracked and hot melted rock called magma escapes. When tectonic plates shift sometimes they shift under each other and make a underwater volcano. When the underwater volcano erupts magma escapes and goes to the surface and goes in volcanoes forming a magma chamber that will make a new island. Ring of Fire The ring of fire is a line that has a number of volcanoes. The ring of fire stretches from New Zealand along the eastern edge of Asia, north across the Aleutian Islands of Alaska, and south along the coast of north and South America. The ring of fire is composed of over 75% of the world’s active and dormant volcanoes. The ring of fire is the result of plate tectonics with its movements and collisions. 32 Composite Volcano The Composite volcano is the most explosive and destructive type of volcano. Composite volcanoes are also called stratovolcanoes. Composite volcanoes are the most common type of volcano. They are very large and tall mountains with steep sides. When a Composite volcano erupts it can destroy the entire mountain top. Also when it explodes it sends a great deal of smoke, ash and dust high into the air causing it to rain ash. This volcanic ash is so intense that it can spread around the entire world. During an eruption water, mud, rock and lava can race down the mountain at a rate of 62 MPH. Even though the Composite volcano is very dangerous and explosive people still live and build homes near these mountains. Shield volcanoes Did you know that shield volcanoes have orange lava? Shield volcanoes get their name from their gentle smooth mountain slopes in the shape of a shield. Shield volcanoes have bright orange lava. Unlike other volcanoes shield volcanoes’ lava flows like a river. Shield volcanoes hold hot gasses or steam that sprays from the crater creating a fountain of lava. When shield volcanoes erupt there are more gentle explosions but they are still really destructive. Shield volcanoes are known to destroy roads, homes and even forests. When shield volcanoes erupt they erupt for a long time and get bigger while they do it. Shield volcanoes are interesting because they have lava fountains. Cinder Cone Do you know that cinder cone volcanoes can erupt at different layers? Cinder volcanoes are the smallest volcanoes. Cinder cone volcanoes are a very common kind of volcano because of how small they are. Once the pressure is released the volcano is done erupting. When the cinder cone volcano is done erupting it becomes solid rock. When it erupts it looks like fireworks. Cinder cone volcanoes don't do damage when they erupt. When the Cinder Cone volcano erupts it can erupt at any or all of their three layers. The central vent layer is very near the magma chamber, it is the 1st layer. Once it passes the Central vent layer the magma goes up to the rock fragment layer which is the 2nd layer. The cinder cone crater or opening is near the top where the magma would erupt at the 3rd layer. In the Cinder Cone Volcano each layer must be opened before the next layer could erupt. Pressure from the magma makes each of the layers open. Sources: http://www.k12.hi.us/~kapunaha/student_projects/volc_blowout/cinder_cone_volcano.htm "Stratovolcano." Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, 5 Nov. 2014. Web. 16 May 2014. <http:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratovolcano>. Davies, Faith. "Facts About Cinder Cones." eHow. Demand Media, 30 Dec. 2009. Web. 16 May 2014. <http://www.ehow.com/facts_5816030_cinder-cones.html>. "Ring of Fire - Pacific Ring of Fire." About.com Geography. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 May 2014. <http:// geography.about.com/cs/earthquakes/a/ringoffire.htm>. "Ring of Fire." - National Geographic Education. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 May 2014. <http:// education.nationalgeographic.com/education/encyclopedia/ring-fire/?ar_a=1>. Wikipedia contributors. "Ring of Fire." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 16 May. 2014. Web. 16 May. 2014. Harryman, William. Plate Tectonics. : Reading A-Z. com, . Print. Austin, Elizabeth. Earthquakes, Volcanoes, and Tsunamis: Reading A-Z.com. Print. Garofano, Chuck. Volcanoes: Reading A-Z.com. Print. 33 34