Tarpon Springs Public Library Sustainability Materials List (Updated December 2020) Pub

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Tarpon Springs Public Library Sustainability Materials List (Updated December 2020) Pub Tarpon Springs Public Library Sustainability Materials List (updated December 2020) Pub. Call Number Title Author Date ADULT MATERIALS - PRINT Singer, Peter & 178 SIN The way we eat : why our food choices matter. [2006]. Mason, Jim. Learning native wisdom : what traditional cultures teach us about 179.1 HOL Holthaus, Gary. [2008]. subsistence, sustainability, and spirituality. Scale : the universal laws of growth, innovation, sustainability, and 303.44 WES West, Geoffrey B. [2018]. the pace of life in organisms, cities, economies, and companies. The great disruption : why the climate crisis will bring on the end 304.2 GIL Gilding, Paul. [2010]. of shopping and the birth of a new world. 304.27 PIL Life changing : how humans are altering life on Earth. Pilcher, Helen. [2020]. Walkable city : how downtown can save America, one step at a 307.12 SPE Speck, Jeff. [2012]. time. 307.34 FOX Green Town USA : the handbook for America’s sustainable future. Fox, Thomas J. [2013]. The buy nothing, get everything plan : discover the joy of spending 332.02 CLA Clark, Liesl. [2020]. less, sharing more, and living generously. Rancher, farmer, fisherman : conservation heroes of the American 333.72 HOR Horn, Miriam. [2016]. heartland. Renewable energies for your home : real-world solutions for green 333.79 GEH Gehrke, Russel. [2009]. conversions. The hype about hydrogen : fact and fiction in the race to save the 333.79 ROM Romm, Joseph J. [2004]. climate. Your water footprint : the shocking facts about how much water 333.91 LEA Leahy, Stephen. [2014]. we use to make everyday products. 333.91 SIE Let there be water : Israel's solution for a water-starved world. Siegel, Seth M. [2015]. Wild things, wild places : adventurous tales of wildlife and 333.95 ALE Alexander, Jane. [2017]. conservation on planet Earth. 333.95 GRE American catch : The fight for our local seafood. Greenberg, Paul. [2014]. The plant messiah : adventures in search of the world's rarest 333.95 MAG Magdalena, Carlos. [2018]. species. The fish market : inside the big money battle for the ocean and 333.95 VAN Van der Voo, Lee. [2016]. your dinner plate. Wilson, Edward 333.95 WIL The future of life. [2002]. Osborne. 338.47 FIA Overdressed : the shockingly high cost of cheap fashion. Cline, Elizabeth L. [2012]. 338.47 FIA Car wars : the rise, the fall, and the resurgence of the electric car. Fialka, John J. [2015]. Byrd, Rosaly & 338.92 BYR Sustainability made simple : small changes for big impact. [2017]. DeMates, Lauren. Lights out : a cyberattack : a nation unprepared : surviving the 363.11 KOP Koppel, Ted. [2015]. aftermath. 363.7 CAR Silent spring. Carson, Rachel. [1962]. 363.7 KLE On fire : the (burning) case for a green new deal. Klein, Naomi. [2019]. Inconspicuous consumption : the environmental impact you don’t 363.7 SCH Schlossberg, Tatiana. [2019]. know you have. Pub. Call Number Title Author Date Wilson, Edward 363.7 WIL Half-earth : our planet's fight for life. [2016]. Osborne. Climate of hope : how cities, businesses, and citizens can save the 363.73 BLO Bloomberg, Michael. [2017]. planet. Are we screwed? : how a new generation is fighting to survive 363.73 DEM Dembicki, Geoff. [2017]. climate change. An inconvenient sequel : truth to power : your action handbook to 363.73 GOR Gore, Al. [2017]. learn the science, find your voice, and help solve the climate crisis. 363.73 GRI Amity and Prosperity : one family and the fracturing of America. Griswold, Eliza. [2018]. The story of more : how we got to climate change and where to go 363.73 JAH Jahren, Hope. [2020]. from here. 363.73 KLE This changes everything : capitalism vs. the climate. Klein, Naomi. [2014]. 363.73 MIN Fire and ice : soot, solidarity, and survival on the roof of the world. Mingle, Jonathan. [2015]. 363.73 NYE Unstoppable : harnessing science to change the world. Nye, Bill. [2015]. 363.73 RIC Losing Earth : a recent history. Rich, Nathaniel. [2019]. An inconvenient truth : the planetary emergency of global 363.738 GOR Gore, Al. [2006]. warming and what we can do about it. Drawdown: The most comprehensive plan ever proposed to 363.738 HAW Hawken, Paul, ed. [2017]. reverse global warming. Just food: where locavores get it wrong and how we can truly eat 394.12 MCW McWilliams, James E. [2009]. responsibly. The secret wisdom of nature : trees, animals, and the 508 WOH extraordinary balance of all living things : stories from science and Wohlleben, Peter. [2019]. observation. 551.46 BYA The blue planet : a natural history of the oceans. Byatt, Andrew. [2001]. The source : how rivers made America and America remade its 551.48 DOY Doyle, Martin. [2018]. rivers. 551.48 STA Still waters : the secret world of lakes. Stager, Curt. [2018]. The song of the dodo : island biogeography in an age of 574.91 QUA Quammen, David. [1996]. extinctions. 577 ECO The ecology book. Juniper, Tony. [2019]. Slobodkin, Lawrence 577 SLO A citizen's guide to ecology. [2003]. B. The aliens among us : how invasive species are transforming the 577.18 ANT Anthony, Leslie. [2017]. planet--and ourselves. Haskell, David 577.3 HAS The songs of trees : stories from nature's great connectors. [2017]. George. 577.34 RUZ The boiling river : adventure and discovery in the Amazon. Ruzo, Andres. [2016]. 577.7 EAR Blue hope : exploring and caring for earth's magnificent ocean. Earle, Sylvia A. [2014]. 578.77 CRA Smithsonian ocean : our water, our world. Cramer, Deborah. [2008]. 578.77 SPA World atlas of coral reefs. Spalding, Mark. [2001]. The wild life of our bodies : predators, parasites, and partners that 579.17 DUN Dunn, Rob R. [2011]. shape who we are today. 591.68 MAR A wild child's guide to endangered animals. Marotta, Millie. [2019]. 591.7 FAR Wildlife atlas : a complete guide to animals and their habitats. Farndon, John. [2002]. Pub. Call Number Title Author Date Winegard, Timothy 595.77 WIN The mosquito : a human history of our deadliest predator. [2019]. C. Our native bees : America's endangered pollinators and the fight 595.79 EMB Embry, Paige. [2018]. to save them. Food matters : a guide to conscious eating with more than 75 613.2 BIT Bittman, Mark. [2009]. recipes. 615.32 HOM Home herbal : cook, brew & blend your own herbs. Steel, Susannah. [2011]. Photovoltaics : design and installation manual : renewable energy Solar Energy 621.31 PHO [2004]. education for a sustainable future. International. Unscrewed : salvage and reuse motors, gears, switches, and more 621.38 SOB Sobey, Edwin J. C. [2011]. from your old electronics. 621.47 CHI Power from the sun : a practical guide to solar electricity. Chiras, Daniel D. [2016]. 621.47 HAR Solar energy projects for the evil genius. Harper, Gavin D. J. [2007]. 621.47 RAM The complete idiot's guide to solar power for your home. Ramsey, Dan. [2010]. The water-wise home : how to conserve, capture, and reuse water 628.16 ALL Allen, Laura. [2015]. in your home and landscape. The self-sufficient life and how to live it : the complete back-to- 630 SEY Seymour, John. [2003]. basics guide. The complete guide to saving seeds : 322 vegetables, herbs, 631.52 GOU Gough, Robert E. [2011]. flowers, fruits, trees, and shrubs. Starting from seed : the natural gardener's guide to propagating 631.53 STA Cutler, Karan Davis. [1998]. plants. Sustainable revolution : permaculture in ecovillages, urban farms, Birnbaum, Juliana & 631.58 BIR [2014]. and communities worldwide. Fox, Louis Practical permaculture for home landscapes, your community, and 631.58 BLO Bloom, Jessi. [2015]. the whole earth. 631.58 KEM Permaculture in pots : how to grow food in small urban spaces. Kemp, Juliet. [2013]. The complete compost gardening guide : banner batches, grow heaps, comforter compost, and other amazing techniques for 631.87 PLE Pleasant, Barbara. [2008]. saving time and money, and producing the most flavorful, nutritious vegetables ever. All new square foot gardening : the revolutionary way to grow 635 BAR Bartholomew, Mel. [2013]. more in less space. 635 JOY Start a community garden : the essential handbook. Joy, LaManda. [2014]. Fresh food from small spaces : the square-inch gardener's guide to 635 RUP Ruppenthal, R. J. [2008]. year-round growing, fermenting, and sprouting. The vegetable gardener's container bible : how to grow a bounty 635 SMI Smith, Edward C. [2011]. of food in pots, tubs, and other containers. 635.04 HEM Gaia's garden : a guide to home-scale permaculture. Hemenway, Toby. [2009]. Rodale's ultimate encyclopedia of organic gardening : the Bradley, Fern 635.04 ROD [2009]. indispensable green resource for every gardener. Marshall. The guide to humane critter control : natural, nontoxic pest 635.04 ROO Rooney, Theresa. [2017]. solutions to protect your yard and garden. Eat more dirt : diverting and instructive tips for growing and 635.04 SAN Sandbeck, Ellen. [2003]. tending an organic garden. The complete idiot’s guide to aquaponic gardening : discover the 635.048 STO Stout, Meg. [2013]. dual benefits of raising fish and plants together. Pub. Call Number Title Author Date Succulents simplified : growing, designing, and crafting with 100 635.95 BAL Baldwin, Debra Lee. [2013 ]. easy-care varieties. Nature's best hope : a new approach to conservation that starts in 635.95 TAL Tallamy, Douglas W. [2019]. your yard. Creating rain gardens : capturing the rain for your own water- Woelfle-Erskine, 635.95 WOE [2012]. efficient garden. Cleo. The organic lawn care manual : a natural, low-maintenance Tukey, Paul 635.96 TUK [2007]. system for a beautiful, safe lawn. Boardway. 635.98 GUE The edible container garden : growing fresh food in small spaces. Guerra, Michael. [2000]. Tiny world terrariums : a step-by-step guide to easily contained 635.98 INC Inciarrano, Michelle. [2012]. life. The new terrarium : creating beautiful displays for plants and 635.98 MAR Martin, Tovah.
Recommended publications
  • Diagnosis & Treatment
    1 DIAGNOSIS & TREATMENT DIAGNOSIS STAGE III & STAGE IV COLORECTAL CANCER YOUR GUIDE IN THE FIGHT If you have recently been diagnosed with stage III or IV colorectal cancer (CRC), or have a loved one with the disease, this guide will give you invaluable information about how to interpret the diagnosis, realize your treatment options, and plan your path. You have options, and we will help you navigate the many decisions you will need to make. Your Guide in the Fight is a three-part book designed to empower and point you towards trusted, credible resources. Your Guide in the Fight offers information, tips, and tools to: DISCLAIMER • Navigate your cancer treatment The information and services provided by Fight Colorectal Cancer are for • Gather information for treatment general informational purposes only and are not intended to be substitutes for • Manage symptoms professional medical advice, diagnoses, • Find resources for personal or treatment. If you are ill, or suspect strength, organization and support that you are ill, see a doctor immediately. In an emergency, call 911 or go to • Manage details from diagnosis the nearest emergency room. Fight to survivorship Colorectal Cancer never recommends or endorses any specific physicians, products, or treatments for any condition. FIGHT COLORECTAL CANCER LOOK FOR THE ICONS We FIGHT to cure colorectal cancer and serve as relentless champions of hope Tips and Tricks for all affected by this disease through informed patient support, impactful policy change, and breakthrough Additional Resources
    [Show full text]
  • External Link Teacher Pack
    Episode 32 Questions for discussion 13th November 2018 US Midterm Elections 1. Briefly summarise the BTN US Midterm Elections story. 2. What are the midterm elections? 3. How many seats are in the House of Representatives? 4. How many of these seats went up for re-election? 5. What are the names of the major political parties in the US? 6. What words would you use to describe their campaigns? 7. The midterm elections can decide which party has the power in ____________. 8. Before the midterms President Trump had control over both the houses. True or false? 9. About how many people vote in the US President elections? a. 15% b. 55% c. 90% 10. What do you understand more clearly since watching the BTN story? Write a message about the story and post it in the comments section on the story page. WWF Living Planet Report 1. In pairs, discuss the WWF Living Planet Report story and record the main points of the discussion. 2. Why are scientists calling the period since the mid-1900s The Great Acceleration? 3. What is happening to biodiversity? 4. Biodiversity includes… a. Plants b. Animals c. Bacteria d. All of the above 5. What percentage of the planet’s animals have been lost over the last 40 years? 6. What do humans depend on healthy ecosystems for? 7. What organisation released the report? 8. What does the report say we need to do to help the situation? 9. How did this story make you feel? 10. What did you learn watching the BTN story? Check out the WWF Living Planet Report resource on the Teachers page.
    [Show full text]
  • The Human Planet
    INTRODUCTION: THE HUMAN PLANET our and a half billion years ago, out of the dirty halo of cosmic dust left over from the creation of our sun, a spinning clump of minerals F coalesced. Earth was born, the third rock from the sun. Soon after, a big rock crashed into our planet, shaving a huge chunk off, forming the moon and knocking our world on to a tilted axis. The tilt gave us seasons and currents and the moon brought ocean tides. These helped provide the conditions for life, which first emerged some 4 billion years ago. Over the next 3.5 billion years, the planet swung in and out of extreme glaciations. When the last of these ended, there was an explosion of complex multicellular life forms. The rest is history, tattooed into the planet’s skin in three-dimensional fossil portraits of fantastical creatures, such as long-necked dinosaurs and lizard birds, huge insects and alien fish. The emergence of life on Earth fundamentally changed the physics of the planet.1 Plants sped up the slow 1 429HH_tx.indd 1 17/09/2014 08:22 ADVENTURES IN THE ANTHROPOCENE breakdown of rocks with their roots, helping erode channels down which rainfall coursed, creating rivers. Photosynthesis transformed the chemistry of the atmosphere and oceans, imbued the Earth system with chemical energy, and altered the global climate. Animals ate the plants, modifying again the Earth’s chemistry. In return, the physical planet dictated the biology of Earth. Life evolves in response to geological, physical and chemical conditions. In the past 500 million years, there have been five mass extinctions triggered by supervolcanic erup- tions, asteroid impacts and other enormous planetary events that dramatically altered the climate.2 After each of these, the survivors regrouped, proliferated and evolved.
    [Show full text]
  • The Columbian Exchange: a History of Disease, Food, and Ideas
    Journal of Economic Perspectives—Volume 24, Number 2—Spring 2010—Pages 163–188 The Columbian Exchange: A History of Disease, Food, and Ideas Nathan Nunn and Nancy Qian hhee CColumbianolumbian ExchangeExchange refersrefers toto thethe exchangeexchange ofof diseases,diseases, ideas,ideas, foodfood ccrops,rops, aandnd populationspopulations betweenbetween thethe NewNew WorldWorld andand thethe OldOld WWorldorld T ffollowingollowing thethe voyagevoyage ttoo tthehe AAmericasmericas bbyy ChristoChristo ppherher CColumbusolumbus inin 1492.1492. TThehe OldOld WWorld—byorld—by wwhichhich wwee mmeanean nnotot jjustust EEurope,urope, bbutut tthehe eentirentire EEasternastern HHemisphere—gainedemisphere—gained fromfrom tthehe CColumbianolumbian EExchangexchange iinn a nnumberumber ooff wways.ays. DDiscov-iscov- eeriesries ooff nnewew ssuppliesupplies ofof metalsmetals areare perhapsperhaps thethe bestbest kknown.nown. BButut thethe OldOld WWorldorld aalsolso ggainedained newnew staplestaple ccrops,rops, ssuchuch asas potatoes,potatoes, sweetsweet potatoes,potatoes, maize,maize, andand cassava.cassava. LessLess ccalorie-intensivealorie-intensive ffoods,oods, suchsuch asas tomatoes,tomatoes, chilichili peppers,peppers, cacao,cacao, peanuts,peanuts, andand pineap-pineap- pplesles wwereere aalsolso iintroduced,ntroduced, andand areare nownow culinaryculinary centerpiecescenterpieces inin manymany OldOld WorldWorld ccountries,ountries, namelynamely IItaly,taly, GGreece,reece, andand otherother MediterraneanMediterranean countriescountries (tomatoes),(tomatoes),
    [Show full text]
  • Deadly Profits: Illegal Wildlife Trafficking Through Uganda And
    Cover: The carcass of an elephant killed by militarized poachers. Garamba National Park, DRC, April 2016. Photo: African Parks Deadly Profits Illegal Wildlife Trafficking through Uganda and South Sudan By Ledio Cakaj and Sasha Lezhnev July 2017 Executive Summary Countries that act as transit hubs for international wildlife trafficking are a critical, highly profitable part of the illegal wildlife smuggling supply chain, but are frequently overlooked. While considerable attention is paid to stopping illegal poaching at the chain’s origins in national parks and changing end-user demand (e.g., in China), countries that act as midpoints in the supply chain are critical to stopping global wildlife trafficking. They are needed way stations for traffickers who generate considerable profits, thereby driving the market for poaching. This is starting to change, as U.S., European, and some African policymakers increasingly recognize the problem, but more is needed to combat these key trafficking hubs. In East and Central Africa, South Sudan and Uganda act as critical waypoints for elephant tusks, pangolin scales, hippo teeth, and other wildlife, as field research done for this report reveals. Kenya and Tanzania are also key hubs but have received more attention. The wildlife going through Uganda and South Sudan is largely illegally poached at alarming rates from Garamba National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan, points in West Africa, and to a lesser extent Uganda, as it makes its way mainly to East Asia. Worryingly, the elephant
    [Show full text]
  • Global Impacts of the Illegal Wildlife Trade Global Impacts of the Illegal Wildlife Trade
    Global Impacts of the Illegal Wildlife Trade Trade Global Impacts of the Illegal Wildlife Global Impacts of the Illegal Wildlife Trade The Costs of Crime, Insecurity and Institutional Erosion Katherine Lawson and Alex Vines Katherine Lawson and Alex Vines February 2014 Chatham House, 10 St James’s Square, London SW1Y 4LE T: +44 (0)20 7957 5700 E: [email protected] F: +44 (0)20 7957 5710 www.chathamhouse.org Charity Registration Number: 208223 Global Impacts of the Illegal Wildlife Trade The Costs of Crime, Insecurity and Institutional Erosion Katherine Lawson and Alex Vines February 2014 © The Royal Institute of International Affairs, 2014 Chatham House (The Royal Institute of International Affairs) is an independent body which promotes the rigorous study of international questions and does not express opinions of its own. The opinions expressed in this publication are the responsibility of the authors. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or any information storage or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the copyright holder. Please direct all enquiries to the publishers. Chatham House 10 St James’s Square London SW1Y 4LE T: +44 (0) 20 7957 5700 F: + 44 (0) 20 7957 5710 www.chathamhouse.org Charity Registration No. 208223 ISBN 978 1 78413 004 6 A catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library. Cover image: © US Fish and Wildlife Service. Six tonnes of ivory were crushed by the Obama administration in November 2013. Designed and typeset by Soapbox Communications Limited www.soapbox.co.uk Printed and bound in Great Britain by Latimer Trend and Co Ltd The material selected for the printing of this report is manufactured from 100% genuine de-inked post-consumer waste by an ISO 14001 certified mill and is Process Chlorine Free.
    [Show full text]
  • On the Trail of the Perfect Wildlife Film Natural History Cameraman Graham Macfarlane on How the Varicam Lt Meets the Challenges of Shooting in the Wild
    PROFESSIONAL CAMERA ON THE TRAIL OF THE PERFECT WILDLIFE FILM NATURAL HISTORY CAMERAMAN GRAHAM MACFARLANE ON HOW THE VARICAM LT MEETS THE CHALLENGES OF SHOOTING IN THE WILD Freelance cameraman Graham Macfarlane has Graham paired the camera with a Canon CN7 lens for the "It's a real headache to focus in 4K these days so I was been lucky enough to travel the world in the majority of the shoot, with the occasional addition of a CN20 spending a lot of time using it, and it was one of the first long lens, when working at more of a distance. things I liked - it's clear and very usable. It's the first pursuit of his passion for wildlife camera for a few years that I've thought about buying cinematography. From chimps to cheetahs, Filming primarily at 800 ISO, he was able to make use of the myself." VariCam LT's dual native 5000 ISO setting a handful of times, he's seen it all and put cameras through their such as at sunset. Graham has also put the VariCam LT through its paces in a paces. Now based in Japan, the Bristolian is forthcoming series following chimpanzees in the one of the BBC Natural History Unit's main Out on the Kenyan plains during the day, however, there was Cameroonian jungle. The choice to go with the VariCam came usually more than enough light. Two separate shoots saw the contributors and has worked on series such as about due to the darkened environment created by the thick crew spending a total of around eight weeks out on location.
    [Show full text]
  • Unit 2 Copycat Animals
    Unit 2 Copycat Animals In this unit, I will . • describe animal features. • describe how animals protect themselves. • talk about ways animals imitate others. • write a paragraph of classification. Check T for True and F for False. 1. This is a plant. T F 2. It is very soft. T F 3. It is very small. T F 4. It has sharp teeth. T F Allied cowrie, Papua New Guinea 20 21 11691_u02_ptg01_hr_020-035.indd 20-21 13/06/13 3:10 PM 1 Listen and read. TR: A10 2 Listen and repeat. TR: A11 Some animals can look like other animals or even like a plant! These copycats are trying to hide from or trick a hungry predator. They can look like another more dangerous animal or like another animal the predator doesn’t like to eat. spots a predator prey These butterflies are not the same species, but they resemble each This cheetah’s black spots act as camouflage. other. The top one tastes bad. The This way, the cheetah doesn’t frighten its prey other one copies its shape and when it’s time to hunt. colors, and tastes bad, too. 3 Work with a partner. What did you a stripe learn? Ask and answer. This colorful frog has stripes on its skin. How do some frogs show The bright colors tell they are poisonous? They have bright colors. hungry predators that the frog is poisonous. This insect is as green as a leaf. It imitates the characteristics of color and shape of leaves to help it hide from predators.
    [Show full text]
  • 2015 Southeast Alaska Discovery Center Spring Schedule 2015 Southeast Alaska Discovery Center Spring Schedule
    2015 Southeast Alaska Discovery Center Spring Schedule 2015 Southeast Alaska Discovery Center Spring Schedule The Southeast Alaska Discovery Cen ter January 2, 2015 operated by the US Forest Service January 23, 2015 February 13, 2015 is excited to announce our Spring 2015 12:15 Film: Frozen Planet Ends of the Earth 12:30 Film: National Parks America’s Best Idea 12:30 Film: National Parks America’s Best winter events schedule. 1:15 Film: Theodore Roosevelt Idea Great Nature American Experience Going Home All programs are free and open to 2:30 Film: Salmon Running the Gaunt let 5:30 Film: America’s Deadly Volcano Katami 2:30 Film: Life on Fire The Surprise Salm on the public. 3:30 Film: The West Fight No More Forever 6:30 Film: The West The People 3:30 Film: The West Speck of Future 5:30 Film: Leave it to Beaver 5:30 Film: The Greely Expedition Schedule is subject to change. 7:00 Speaker: Paleolimnology Lake Harriet 7:00 Speaker: Ketchikan High School Oce an Additional events may be oered January 9, 2015 Hunt and Water Quality with Science Bowl Competition with Julie throughout the winter. Christopher Done r Landwehr Visit our website http://alaskacenters.gov/ 12:30 Film: John Muir in the New World January 30, 2015 February 20, 2015 ketchikan.cfm or request ema-il updates by 2:00 Film: Life on Fire: Volcanoes Doctors contacting [email protected] 3:00 Film: The West the People 12:30 Film: 60 Degrees Nort h 12:30 Film: The National Parks America’s Best 4:45 Film: Your Inner Fish 2:00 Film: Braving Alaska Idea Morning of Creation 5:30 Film: Becoming Human First Steps Education box check in/out, information 3:30 Film: The West Death Runs Riot 2:30 Film: The Greely Expedition 7:00 Speaker: A day in the Life of Ketchikan requests, eld trips and map sales will be 3:30 Film: The West Geography of Hope with Susan Hoyt 5:30 Film: Your Inner Monkey oered during our business hours: 7:00 Film: Tracing Roots with Dolores 5:45 Film: Great Migrations Born to Mo ve Fridays Noon to 8 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Geography Super Curriculum Year 7
    Geography Super Curriculum Year 7 Map Skills Extreme China Ecosystems Rivers Environments School library section 551, School library section 551 School library section 951 School library section School library section 912 Extreme Earth, Visual Travel Through China, 574.5/581 Planet Habitats, 551.48 Mapping Britain’s Mapping Britain’s Explorers 551.2 Come on a journey of Louise & Richard Spilsbury Landscapes, Rivers, by Landscapes, Coasts, by Geography Fact Files, discovery by Lynn Huggins- (581) Horrible Geography: Barbara Taylor (551.48) Barbara Taylor (551.4) Deserts by Anna Cooper (951) Chinese Bloomin’ Rainforest Geography Fact Files, Mapping Britain’s Claybourne (551.41) Focus, Changing China, by Rivers by Mandy Ross Landscapes, Rivers, by Horrible Geography - Marta Block (551.48) Horrible Barbara Taylor (551.48) Bloomin' Rainforests Geography - Raging Rivers Children’s Atlas (912) Harry (2001) (2000) Potter, (Marauder's Map) JRR Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings (map of Middle Earth) Master and commander Plant Earth – Deserts, Supersized Earth – Episode Ecosystems class clips, BBC BBC Human PlanetFriend (2003) Mountains, From Pole to 2 Bridge Building Mulan http://www.bbc.co.uk/ or foe? Lord of the rings (2001) Pole. (1998) education/ topics/ Supersized Earth, episode BBC Human Planet: Arctic ztgw2hv/ resources/1 3, Food, Fire and Water – Life in the deep freeze. BBC Human Planet – Jungles. (Water) Deserts – Life in the Planet Earth, Jungles Avatar Into the wild (2007) Planet furnace (2009) Madagascar (2005) Earth, Fresh Water Mountains – life in the air The history of maps. When, How to plants adapt to Choose one animal that is Research and create fact files Research about the past, why and how did the OS map living in threatened by China’s for 5 of the world’s main present and future plans begin? When and why did deserts/rainforests/pol ar development.
    [Show full text]
  • Frozen Kingdom
    Frozen Kingdom Welcome to the planet’s coldest lands… vast wilds, hostile territories, incredibly beautiful yet often deadly. Take shelter from the elements or fall prey to icy winds and deepest chill. Trek bravely and valiantly across treacherous terrain to the ends of the Earth, treading deep in snow or pulled by a team of mighty sled dogs. Be alert, for magnificent mammals roam these lands, sometimes hungry or fresh for a fight. Perhaps a hungry polar bear or an arctic fox; hunting rodents and swift as the wind. Key facts Key Vocabulary Fungi-plants that have no flowers, leaves, or green colouring, such as a There are no land-dwelling mammals in the Antarctic although mushroom or a toadstool. Other types of fungus such as mould are extremely small and look like a fine powder. the Arctic has many land-dwelling mammals include musk ox, reindeer, caribou, fox, hare, wolf, lemming and bears. Mushroom-fungi that you can eat Toadstool-a fungus that you cannot eat because it is poisonous The seas of the Antarctic and the Arctic both have marine Fermentation-a chemical change that happens in vegetable and animal mammals. substances. Above the Arctic Circle, there is all-day sunshine in the summer Microbe-a very small living thing, which you can only see if you use for at least one day a year (and there’s a full 24 hours of a microscope. darkness on at least one day too!) Bacteria-very small organisms. Some bacteria can cause disease. Climate change is the polar bears’ biggest threat.
    [Show full text]
  • The South Africa – Viet Nam Rhino Horn Trade Nexus
    Executive Summary of The South Africa – Viet Nam Rhino Horn Trade Nexus: A deadly combination of institutional lapses, corrupt wildlife industry professionals and Asian crime syndicates By Tom Milliken and Jo Shaw with contributions from Richard H. Emslie, Russell D. Taylor and Chris Turton A TRAFFIC REPORT THE SITUATION AT THE SOURCE SOUTH AFRICA outh Africa, a vast country spanning the bot- tom of the African continent, unquestionably has the world’s most successful conservation record for rhinos. In 2011, this country alone Sconserved 83% of Africa’s rhinos and nearly three-quarters of all wild rhinos worldwide. As one of the most biologically diverse nations glob- ally, South Africa has long promoted biodiversity con- servation through the sustainable use of natural resources. In fact, the country’s constitution enshrines these principles, calling for: “a prosperous, environ- mentally conscious nation, whose people are in har- monious coexistence with the natural environment, and which derives lasting benefits from the conserva- tion and sustainable use of its rich biological diversity”. With such an enabling environment, it is not sur- prising that, since the 1960s, there has been a marked shift to wildlife-based land-use amongst private land- owners, and today game ranches in South Africa cover an area nearly three times the collective size of all national and provincial protected areas on State land. Wildlife in general, but rhinos in particular, have ben- efitted tremendously from these visionary natural resource policies. But the country’s superlative conser- vation record of more than a century is under threat. Ironically, the fate of South Africa’s rhinos is now inextricably linked with market forces in Viet Nam, a country that recently saw its own rhino population slip into ignominious extinction.
    [Show full text]