NATGEOKIDS.COM • SEPTEMBER 2019 C OOL POSTER WILD PHOTO SHOOT BLING! Cute NEW COMIC Servals! FIND OUT HOW THIS ADORABLE KITTEN WILL ONE DAY BE A FIERCE HUNTER. IN THIS ISSUE 12 Weirdest. Cat. Ever. Editor in Chief and Vice President, The serval might look strange, Kids Magazines & Digital but that’s a good thing when Rachel Buchholz it comes to hunting. Vice President, Visual Identity Eva Absher-Schantz Design Director, Magazines Eileen O’Tousa-Crowson Editorial Kay Boatner, Senior Editor / Digital Producer; Allyson Shaw, Associate Editor / Digital Producer Photo Shannon Hibberd, Senior Photo Editor; Hillary Leo, Contributing Photo Editor Production Sean Philpotts, Director Digital Laura Goertzel, Director; Tirzah Weiskotten, Video Manager PUBLISHED BY NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PARTNERS, LLC Chairman of the Board of Directors Peter Rice Chief Executive Officer Gary E. Knell Executive Vice President and General Manager, DEPARTMENTS National Geographic Media 20 Real or Fake: David Miller 4 Weird Senior Vice President, Kids Media, Content All-Bling Edition But True! Jennifer Emmett Don’t be fooled! Discover 5 Guinness World Records Advertising Offices Kim Connaghan, Vice President, Publisher some hacks to learn if (212) 822-7431; Detroit Karen Sarris (248) 368-6304; your treasures are for real. 6 Bet You Didn’t Know! West Coast Eric Josten (424) 292-5715 7 All About Money International Magazine Publishing Yulia Petrossian Boyle, 8 By the Numbers Senior Vice President; Jennifer Jones, Business Manager; Rossana Stella, Editorial Manager 10 Amazing Animals Finance Jeannette Swain, Senior Budget Manager; 28 Fun Stuff Tammi Colleary-Loach, Senior Manager, Rights Clearance; 22 Keep Earth Wild Pinar Taskin, Contracts Manager A Nat Geo photographer Consumer Marketing John MacKethan, Vice President and General Manager; Mark Viola, Circulation Planning Director; gives you a behind-the- FUN Richard J. Brown, Acquisition Director scenes look at his quest R! Market Services Tracy Hamilton Stone, Research Manager STE to save animals. PO S 18–19 Advertising Production Kristin Semeniuk, Director; PAGE Julie A. Ibinson, Manager Publicity Kelly Forsythe, Publicist (202) 912-6720 Parents, contact us online: [email protected] COVER: SUZI ESZTERHAS / MINDEN PICTURES (SERVAL); EINHARD DIRSCHERL / ALAMY (CROC- ODILE); JOEL SARTORE / NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS (ISSN 1542-3042) is published ten times a year 26 Sneak Peek! PHOTO ARK / NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC IMAGE by National Geographic Partners, LLC, Washington, DC 20036. For more COLLECTION (ORANGUTAN); TRAVISMANLEY / information contact natgeo.com/info. Check out a CAN STOCK PHOTO INC (AQUAMARINE); MARISA- BELL / CAN STOCK PHOTO INC. (CITRINE, GARNET); Periodical postage paid at Washington, DC, and additional mailing chapter from STRIKA ENTERTAINMENT (ZEUS THE MIGHTY offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC ILLUSTRATION). PAGE 3: FIONAAYERST / GETTY IM- KIDS, P.O. Box 37545, Boone, IA 50037. Subscriptions: United States, Explorer Academy: AGES (SERVAL); ANCH / SHUTTERSTOCK (PEARLS); JOEL SARTORE / NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PHOTO $25.00; Canada, $29.95; elsewhere, $34.95; all in U.S. funds. Single copy: The Double Helix. ARK / NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC IMAGE COLLEC- United States, $4.99; Canada, $6.99 in Canadian funds or $5.75 in U.S. TION (ARCTIC FOX); SCOTT PLUMBE (EXPLORER funds; elsewhere, $5.99 in U.S. funds or equivalent (includes postage). In ACADEMY ILLUSTRATION) Canada, Agreement number 1000010298, return undeliverable Canadian addresses to NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS, P.O. Box 819 STN Main, Markham, Ontario L3P 9Z9. National Geographic Kids occasionally makes its member The submission of photographs and other material to NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC JUST FOR PARENTS and subscriber lists available to reputable organizations KIDS is done at the risk of the sender; NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS cannot that market their products and services through the accept liability for loss or damage. mail. If you do not want your name and address used in EXPLORATION HAPPENS this manner, you can remove it by returning this coupon. SUBSCRIBE TO NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS! because of you. Do not make my name and address available to other organizations. CALL TOLL FREE 1–800–647–5463 MON.–FRI., 8 A.M.–9 P.M. EST, SAT., 9 A.M.–7 P.M. EST When you read with us, you help further Please note that Nat Geo Kids will not disclose your For a subscription to NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS, send written requests— the work of our scientists, explorers, and including name, address, zip code, and payment in U.S. funds or equivalent—to child’s name for marketing or promotional purposes. NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS, P.O. BOX 37545, BOONE, IA 50037 educators around the world. Please include a current magazine label with For gift subscriptions, send giver’s name and address as well as recipient’s. this coupon, and mail your request to: Parents, to learn more, visit natgeo.com/info Copyright © 2019 National Geographic Partners, LLC. All rights reserved. Reproduction of the National Geographic Kids, Customer Service whole or any part of the contents of NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS without written permission P.O. Box 37545, Boone, IA 50037 is prohibited. NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS and Yellow Border: Registered Trademarks ® Marcas Registradas. Printed in the U.S.A. ISSUE 493 For corrections and clarifications, go online. natgeo.com/corrections PRINTED ON 100% PEFC-CERTIFIED PAPER—PEFC/29-31-58— Please recycle. Follow us on Twitter @NGKids and like us on Facebook. Check out these CHECK OUT THE BOOK! outrageous facts. BY JULIE VOSBURGH AGNONE You can buy soap that smells like Porphyrophobia is the fear of purple. bacon frying. People flush about 27,000 trees’ worth of A glass eye, toilet paper three sets of false down the teeth, and a wig drain fell into a lake under a every day. roller coaster in England. Some A geep is sharks A Norwegian man grew a part can live to be 17.5-foot-long ) goat, 75 years beard. S » D U O That’s longer than / Y L D part T C M ( N T E A S an ice-cream truck from A » L E G old. M G K / I U A bumper to bumper. P sheep. R G E O ( M I ; R ) F Y C T F T A E A T T O V E I S G T G ( G A / K E N C R / M O C R O ; T ) S E S L K N R R O E M F A T An Iowa teenager U / T H S S U H ( Y H T K A S A J C / ; made her R ) O 3 G D T 3 A S 3 N R S M U E C ; ) O ; T ) R D T E G U N L I K U H T C prom dress S O E A / R U B L G L D A K B ( R C M I K A A E C out of B Saucer-shaped N B O ( A M T T K S U S C E R G ( E D O L T T K I S T C R W chewing-gum U lenticular clouds O ; E ) H T T S E S T Y / R U E E have been mistaken for D H T S S N S T wrappers. I / L U A E L H O S G T M ( I / O N Y L L ; ; P ) M ) P B A R E U L E E L P A H N A I / S P ( T L R L T K E E A C L I W O M ; T O D ) S T A R ( R L E S E P G E UFOs. T P T G N A U A A R E H M S I S W 4 NAT GEO KIDS • SEPTEMBER 2019 GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS BY CHELSEA KATZ HUGEST DOG EVER dog drinking from the kitchen A sink might sound weird— unless you’re Zeus, the tallest dog ever. About the height of an average five-year-old kid, Zeus needed a lot of water to wash down all his food. Every day the gentle giant ate about 12 cups of dry and two cans of wet dog food, plus chicken or scrambled eggs. If all that food made him sleepy, he just headed to a bedroom to snooze on his own full-size mattress. DED . ROW D C CAR E T I L M E I L A nd you thought sardines were squished! Twenty-seven S H D C I R people—including four in the trunk—squeezed into a M O A L C aAh—much E U R A tiny car to break the record for the most people crammed into P D ; better than L ) R N a Mini Cooper. So how’d they do it? The participants were all O A sIttIng In S W R S O traffIc. S gymnasts, of course! Suddenly that long family road trip doesn’t C E ( N S N D I G seem so bad after all. R N U LYI O F G C 9 E 1 R 0 2 D L © R Y O B W D AN S E M S D I E V N O N I R U P G his is no bird or plane. Fraser N ; ) O S I T U Corsan holds the record for the E A T Z ( M R S fastest speed in a wingsuit: 246.6 D O F R N O I . C miles an hour! That’s faster than some ) E R R A D C L helicopters. A wingsuit has extra ( R S O D R material between the arms and legs W O S C S E E R that increases a skydiver’s lift, N D N I L U R enabling the daredevil to “fly.” Corsan G O / W S S gained speed after jumping from an O S E M N A N airplane at above 35,000 feet and R I T U T G O eventually parachuted to the ground.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages36 Page
-
File Size-