by Donna Love illustrated by Shennen Bersani

Similar documents
For Creative Minds. Glaciers

by Donna Love illustrated by Shennen Bersani

So far, you have looked at grasslands and three different

Mighty Glaciers. Mighty Glaciers. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

Colorado Life Zone Scavenger Hunt

Owls. Owls live in most countries of the world. They are meat-eaters and hunt insects

How Glaciers Change the World By ReadWorks

ì<(sk$m)=beicea< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U

Teacher s Guide For. Glaciers

Death Valley Is a Beautiful but Dangerous Place

BOOK SETS, Wilbooks Guided Reading Level= GR Developmental Reading Assessment= DRA

ì<(sk$m)=beicdd< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U

Glaciers. Reading Practice

Unit 1. School Days. First Nine Weeks

Great Science Adventures

Geography 120, Instructor: Chaddock In Class 13: Glaciers and Icecaps Name: Fill in the correct terms for these descriptions: Ablation zone: n zne:

Seasons of the. WRITTEN BY Shirley Duke

To complement this exercise book and learn more about expeditions please visit our ETETeachers website and see our supporting resources.

Santa Rosa Plateau Ecological Reserve

GR. 2 WILD ABOUT WINTER TEACHERS PACKAGE. Bringing Winter to your Classroom

Seven Continents. Grade Level: 1 3

Recrystallization of snow to form LARGE. called FIRN: like packed snowballs. the weight of overlying firn and snow.

AGAP Antarctic Research Project Visualizing Data Learning About Antarctica From RADAR Data? Student Version

Why Focus on the Polar Regions for impacts from Sea Level Rise? Margie Turrin Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University

Haslingden High School Geography Department HOMEWORK BOOKLET Year 8 Block A Level 2-4

Inuit Adventure: Narwhals & other Wildlife of Baffin Island

Rationale or Purpose: This lesson will demonstrate several properties of water and bring awareness of what global warming may do to the sea level.

MIDDLE SCHOOL CURRICULUM TR AILING ICE AGE M YST ERI E S ICE AGE TREKKING

All about Koalas. Sample file. Third through Sixth

I. Types of Glaciers 11/22/2011. I. Types of Glaciers. Glaciers and Glaciation. Chapter 11 Temp. B. Types of glaciers

The Taiga Boreal Forest. By: Charlie Lichauer, Harrison Simons, and Hunter Williams

Lesson. Glaciers Carve the Land A QUICK LOOK. Overview. Big Idea. Process Skills Key Notes

Henry s Discovery. Chapter 6 Lesson 97: Sounds of EU and EW Lexile Measure: 690L

MONDAY MORNING SCIENCE BLAST Flubber Glacier - Earth Science - Earth Processes

Maya & Filippo Visit a Glacier. Alinka Rutkowska Illustrated by Konrad Checinski

Descent into the Ice PROGRAM OVERVIEW

GOING CAMPING HAL AMES

Notes for Suitcase Oceanography Icebergs and Sea Ice Lesson 1 Where do Icebergs come from?

Children's Discovery Trail Guide - Lost Creek

1 Glacial Erosion and

AFRICA'S PHYSICAL FEATURES

THE DEPARTMENT OF HIGHER EDUCATION UNIVERSITY OF COMPUTER STUDIES FIFTH YEAR

Lesson 5: Ice in Action

Mapping the Snout. Subjects. Skills. Materials

Dynamic Planet Practice Test Written by Samuel Bressler

ARCTIC TUNDRA ELLA SABO, KINSEY SPERLING, GRACE ZOLKOWSKI

3. Which word is a synonym

Mountains. Erinn Banting

Snow Way by Beth Geiger

glacier _G4U1W5_ indd 1 2/24/10 4:10:48 PM

Study Island. Generation Date: 04/01/2014 Generated By: Cheryl Shelton Title: Grade 4 Physical Science

Animals and Adaptations

ACADIA. Acadia. ational Park I L O LEVELED BOOK O

ì<(sk$m)=bdcecd< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U

Chapter 7 Geography and the Early Settlement of Egypt, Kush, and Canaan

Shaping of North America. Physical Geography II of the United States and Canada. The Last Ice Age. The Ice Age. Pleistocene Polar Ice Cap 2/14/2013

GEOGRAPHY AND HISTORY

Ice Man Pitch script, UNTV. Written by Ashley E. Williams Arrowhead Films

A COLORING AND ACTIVITY BOOK M ANATEE S. Florida s Gentle Giants. Illustrated by Jerry Bulgrin. Produced by.

Maggie s Activity Pack

Glaciers. Clicker Question. Glaciers and Glaciation. How familiar are you with glaciers? West Greenland. Types of Glaciers.

Safety Tips for Children Grades K-5

World Wonders. Introduction. Barnaby Newbolt STAGE. Chapter summary

Dynamic Planet C Test

The Land Photo Source: The Atlas of Canada, The Red River, Manatoba, Canada land/physio_red_ri

Antarctic glaciers' melt is happening more rapidly than was first believed

Exam Review. Part 3- Deserts, Glaciers, and maps

Chapter 1 Test A (1 of 5)

READING QUESTIONS: Chapter 7, Glaciers GEOL 131 Fall pts. a. Alpine Ice from larger ice masses flowing through a valley to the ocean

Canada. Canada A Reading A Z Level J Leveled Book Word Count: 294 LEVELED BOOK J

Global Warming in New Zealand

Ebook Code: ISBN

Terms to Know. artesian well coral atoll krill lagoon

Human Habitat. Cachuma Lake DISCOVERY BOOK Cachuma Lake Discovery Book V1, Santa Barbara County Parks

Test Booklet. Subject: LA, Grade: 04 MSA 2009 Grade 4 Reading. Student name:

LUKA AND THE EARL OF DUDLEY Based on the story of Puss in Boots

Chapter 16 Glaciers and Glaciations

Glaciers and Glaciation Earth - Chapter 18 Stan Hatfield Southwestern Illinois College

She backs legislation to protect her swim partner a 20-foot shark

Glacier National Park, MT

Table of Contents. Social Studies Lessons. Science Lessons. Glossary 106 Performance Projects 107. A Productive Partnership LE7.1c 4. Teaching.

Exam Review. Part 3- Deserts, Glaciers, and maps

Remote and magical The Antarctic plateau

Places to Stay. Incredible Places to Stay A Reading A Z Level P Leveled Book Word Count: 825 J M P. LEVELED BOOK P Incredible

Outdoor Clothing: The Layering System

Antarctic glaciers' melt is happening more rapidly than was first believed

APPENDIX E GLACIERS AND POLAR ICE CAPS

avaluació educació primària

US Army Survival Manual: FM PDF

ESS Glaciers and Global Change

MIDDLE SCHOOL CURRICULUM TR AILING ICE AGE M YST ERI E S SEARCHING GLACIAL FEATURES

Chapter 7. Geography and the Early Settlement of Egypt, Kush, and Canaan

Utah Studies DOMINGUEZ AND ESCALANTE

Pick a Box Game 1. a green I see story as. at be and story number and. green a number at as see. and story as green be I. I see be and at number

ULTIMATE ALASKAN WILDERNESS

Glacier National Park

JULIET AND THE FALL FESTIVAL Hal Ames

Rayado Ridge Health and Safety

AUSTRALIA. Reading Focus: Comprehension/ Materials (per student) Preparation. Guided Questions. Lesson. Reading Lesson

The Story of Stickeen

Transcription:

by Donna Love illustrated by Shennen Bersani

front flap back flap Chicken Little may have thought the sky was falling but Peter Pika is sure the glaciers are melting and is off to talk to the Mountain Monarch about it. Joined along the way by friends Tammy Ptarmigan, Sally Squirrel, Mandy Marmot, and Harry Hare, they all wonder what will happen to them if the glaciers melt. Where will they live, how will they survive? When Wiley Wolverine tries to trick them, can the Mountain Monarch save them? More importantly, can the Mountain Monarch stop the glaciers from melting? Animals in the book include: pika white-tailed ptarmigan ground squirrel marmot snowshoe hare wolverine bighorn or Dall sheep Free online resources and support for the book at www.sylvandellpublishing.com include: For Creative Minds as seen in the book (in English & Spanish): Glaciers Are Glaciers Melting? Water and Glaciers Glaciers Around the World: True or False? Animal Matching Activity Alpine and Arctic Animal Adaptations Food for Thought Teaching Activities: Reading Questions Math Language Arts Geography Science Coloring Pages Award-winning author Donna Love brings nature to life for children through her books: The Glaciers are Melting!; Henry the Impatient Heron; Loons, Diving Birds of the North; Awesome Ospreys, Fishing Birds of the World; Animals Count in Grand Canyon National Park; and The Totally Out There Guide to Glacier National Park. Donna lives in Montana, where her husband is a district ranger on the Lolo National Forest. They have three grown children, and one granddaughter. Award-winning children s book illustrator Shennen Bersani has two million copies of her illustrated books cherished and read by families throughout the world. She has been a freelance illustrator since 1989. She works primarily with colored pencils, sometimes using a mixed-media technique of colored pencils, crayons, and paint. Her art delivers a unique blend of realism, heartfelt emotion, love of nature, and life lessons for children of all ages. In addition to The Glaciers Are Melting! and Astro: the Steller Sea Lion for Sylvan Dell, she has illustrated a number of best selling books, including, Nana, What s Cancer?; Snakes: Long, Longer, Longest; Ocean Counting: Odd Numbers and My Sister, Alicia May. Her art also appears in many magazines, newspapers, and publications. Shennen lives with her family near Boston, Massachusetts. by Donna Love illustrated by Shennen Bersani Interactive Quizzes: Reading Comprehension, For Creative Minds, and Math Word Problems English and Spanish Audiobooks Related Websites Aligned to State Standards (searchable database) Accelerated Reader and Reading Counts Quizzes Lexile and Fountas & Pinnell Reading Levels ebooks with Auto-Flip, Auto-Read, and selectable English and Spanish text and audio available for purchase online. Thanks to Donna Love Shennen Bersani

Once upon a time, on a far away mountain, lived a little pika named Peter. As he stuck his head out of his rock doorway one day, a drop of water fell, b-loop, on his head. Great glaciers! whistled Peter Pika. The glaciers are melting... the glaciers are melting? If the glaciers melt, where will I live? I must go and ask the Mountain Monarch. He ll know what to do.

Peter Pika scrambled up the face of the mountain as fast as he could. On a high ledge, he met Tammy Ptarmigan. Where are you going? Tammy Ptarmigan asked Peter Pika. The glaciers are melting, whistled Peter Pika. And I m going to tell the Mountain Monarch. Gleaming glaciers! chirped Tammy Ptarmigan. If the glaciers melt, will I still turn white in winter? I will go with you to ask the Mountain Monarch.

The two climbed onward until they came to Sally Squirrel. Where are you going? Sally Squirrel asked Tammy Ptarmigan and Peter Pika. The glaciers are melting! chirped Tammy Ptarmigan. Peter Pika told me. Yes, a drop of it dripped on my head, whistled Peter Pika. And we are going to tell the Mountain Monarch. Glistening glaciers! squeaked Sally Squirrel. If the glaciers melt, where will I sleep in winter? I will go with you to ask the Mountain Monarch.

The three climbed on until they met Mandy Marmot. Where are you going? Mandy Marmot asked Sally Squirrel, Tammy Ptarmigan, and Peter Pika. The glaciers are melting! squeaked Sally Squirrel. Peter Pika told us, chirped Tammy Ptarmigan. Yes, a drop of it dripped on my head, whistled Peter Pika. And we are going to tell the Mountain Monarch. Glorious glaciers! piped Mandy Marmot. If the glaciers melt, will it be too hot in summer for all this fur? I will go with you to ask the Mountain Monarch.

For Creative Minds The For Creative Minds educational section may be photocopied or printed from our website by the owner of this book for educational, non-commercial uses. Cross-curricular teaching activities, interactive quizzes, and more are available online. Go to www.sylvandellpublishing.com and click on the book s cover to explore all the links. Glaciers If it snows where you live, it probably melts during the summer. But some mountain peaks are so high, that there is snow all year long. Snow stays on the ground all year long around the North and South Poles too. The next winter, new snow piles on top of the snow from earlier years. The weight of all the new snow turns the older snow into ice. When the ice gets as thick as 60 feet (about 18 meters), it becomes a glacier. It takes years for glaciers to form. A river of ice? Rivers do not freeze to make glaciers, but glaciers do move. As the ice builds and the glacier gets heavier, gravity pulls it down. Some glaciers move slowly and others move quickly. You might hear loud noises from a fast-moving glacier. Moving glaciers pick up rocks and dirt, carrying them along with the ice. The rocks and glaciers carve valleys, eroding the land as they move. During the ice ages, some huge rocks were moved hundreds of miles. They are not like any rocks around them and are called glacial eratics or out-of-place rocks. 1909 USGS Photo LIbrary, 2004 Bruce F. Molina, USGS Photograph-Grant 132 Muir Inlet Glacier Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, Alaska 1941 W. O. Field, # 41-64, 1950 W. O. Field, National Snow and Ice #F50-R29, Data Center and Glacier Glacier Bay National Park Bay National Park and and Preserve Archive Preserve Archive Are Glaciers Melting? Compare the pictures of glaciers below. Do you think the glaciers are growing, staying the same, or melting? Holgate Glacier Kenai Fjords National Park, Alaska 2004 Bruce F. Molina, USGS 2002 Bruce F. Molina, USGS A glacier s size can be easily measured. Bear Glacier Kenai Fjords National Park, Alaska 2005 Bruce F. Molina, USGS 2007 Bruce F. Molina, USGS Thunderbird Glacier Glacier National Park, Montana 1907 Morton Elrod, GNP Archives 2007 Dan Fagre/Greg Pederson, USGS Many scientists believe that the glaciers are melting because of human-caused global warming. Other scientists believe that the glaciers are melting as part of a naturally occurring climate cycle. Either way, scientists agree that many glaciers are melting and that gives them questions to research and study. Ice sheets or continental glaciers move out from their edges on flat land. Alpine glaciers are on mountains and flow down. Glaciers grow if snow collects year after year. As glaciers melt, they drop the rocks and dirt, making new land called moraine. Glaciers stay the same size if ice melts at the same rate as the snow collects. Glaciers shrink if the ice melts faster than the snow collects. What could happen to rivers as glaciers melt and how could that affect the people who live downstream? How does the earth s climate affect a glacier? Why are some glaciers and ice sheets melting and not others? So far, the Antarctic ice sheet is not melting, but the Arctic sheet in Greenland is. What could happen to the sea level as glaciers melt and how could that affect the people who live on islands or along the coasts? How much freshwater might come out of melting glaciers?

Asia 1 Glaciers 3 Africa 5 There Australia Glaciers Around the World: True or False? North American Ice Sheet during Ice Ages about 20,000 years ago are near the North or South Pole or are high in the mountains. is the only continent without any glaciers. are three active glaciers in New England. North America Equator Antarctica 2 There 4 Continental 6 More Arctic (Greenland) Ice Sheet South America Africa Europe Glaciers and Ice Sheets Antarctic Ice Sheet are some glaciers near the equator (look for the red line.) glaciers (also called ice sheets) are found in Alaska and Antarctica. land area is covered by glaciers on the North American continent now than during the Ice Ages. Answers: 1. True; 2. True: they are high in the mountains; 3. False: Africa does have glaciers but Australia does not; 4. False: there are only two ice sheets and they are found in Greenland and Antarctica; 5. False, there are signs of past glaciers in New England but the active glaciers in the US are in Alaska and in the western mountains; 6: False: an ice sheet covered much of the continent during the last Ice Age. What Can We Do? Whether the glaciers are melting because of human-caused global warming or because of a naturally occurring climate cycle, families can save energy and money by going green! Plant native trees and bushes in your yard. Reduce, recycle, and reuse as many things as you can: Take and use your own bags to stores. Pack your lunch in reusable containers. How can you reuse outgrown clothes, toys, or books? Save water: Take showers instead of baths. Wait until you have a full load before running the washing machine or dishwasher. Don t run water when not actually using. Save gas: Walk or ride a bike whenever you can. Use a carpool or ride a bus to school. Water and Glaciers Water covers about 72% (almost 3/4) of the Earth s surface. Of that amount, 97% is salt water (ocean water). Only about three percent is fresh water needed for drinking, bathing, and growing food. One third (about 33%) of fresh water is in the water cycle (rain and clouds), groundwater, (underground water), and surface water, such as lakes and rivers. About two thirds (66%) of the fresh water on earth is frozen in glaciers, making glaciers the largest reservoir of fresh water on earth. Buy fresh, local produce when possible. Use less heat and electricity: Keep house temperatures a few degrees warmer in the summer and cooler in the winter. Adjust thermostats when you leave the house and at night. Turn lights off when you leave a room. Turn off TVs, computers, and other electrical equipment when you aren t using them. Use energy-efficient light bulbs. Salt water Land

1 These mammals easily climb up and down narrow cliffs on rocky mountaintops and feed on whatever plants and grass they find. The males (rams) have huge, curled horns that they use to fight each other for the females (ewes). These animals migrate down the mountain in the winter to where it is a little warmer and back up again for the summer. 2 These birds live in high mountain areas from Alaska to New Mexico. They can fly but prefer to walk and their feathered legs and toes keep them warm. Their feathers turn white during the winter to help hide in the snow but are a gray brown during the rest of the year. They eat berries and leaves from tundra plants. Some migrate down the mountain or small distances, following food in the winter. 3 There are several different types of these mammals adapted to a wide variety of habitats from hot deserts to cold mountaintops and arctic. Some live in trees (maybe in your own backyard) and some live on the ground, like the one in this book. Most eat seeds and have a special cheek pouch to carry the seeds. They are related to chipmunks and most hibernate during the winter. 4 Because Animal Matching Activity Match the animal to its description. Answers are upside down on the next page. bighorn or Dall sheep ground squirrel marmot pika snowshoe hare white-tailed ptarmigan wolverine these mammals don t hibernate in winter when it can be hard to find food, these animals cut and dry plants during the summer and then save the plants in a hay pile in their burrows to eat during the winter. 5 These social mammals live in underground burrows and hibernate during the fall and winter. During the summer, while most are playing, one animal stands guard and will let the others know if danger approaches. These plant-eating animals will also eat snow to get the water they need. 6 Unlike their rabbit cousins, these plant-eating mammals are born with fur and able to see. Their fur turns white in the winter so they can hide in plain sight. They even have fur on their long hind feet that help them to walk on top of the snow, like snowshoes. They have short ears that help them to stay warm in the winter. 7 These meat-eating mammals are shy but clever. They usually live alone and mark their territories with a strong smell. These animals have long guard hairs (on top of their fur) that trap air to help keep them warm and the snow and rain out. These fast-running animals kill prey with their very sharp teeth. Alpine and Arctic Animal Adaptations The animals in the book can be found in the same area (habitat) as you would find glaciers: high in the mountains (alpine) and the arctic. It gets very cold in the winter with a lot of snow and stays cold and windy during the summer. Animals living in these areas need to stay warm, hide in the snow and ice, and find or have food to eat (especially in the winter). Use the information and illustrations in the book and in the matching activity to answer the following questions. Answers are upside down, below. 1 Which 3 Which 5 Which 7 Which 9 Which animals have white fur or feathers in the winter to hide in the snow? animal gathers food during the summer to eat in the winter? animal has big feet (like snowshoes) to walk on snow? animals migrate for the winter? animals are mammals? 2 Which animals have fur or feathers on their feet? 4 Which animals have little ears to stay warmer in the winter? 6 Which animals hibernate for the winter? 8 Which animal is a bird? 10 Which animals eat plants (herbivores) and which eats meat (carnivore)? Food for Thought How is this story similar to and different than The Sky is Falling? Why did Wiley Wolverine want the animals to go to his den? How did he try to trick them? The animals in the story worry about what they will do and how they might live if the glaciers melt. What are the animals worried about? Adaptation Answers: 1. ptarmigan, snowshoe hare; 2. ptarmigan, snowshoe hare; 3. pika; 4. pika, snowshoe hare; 5. snowshoe hare back feet; 6. marmot, some ground squirrels; 7. bighorn/dall sheep, ptarmigan; 8. ptarmigan; 9. bighorn/dall sheep, ground squirrel, pika, marmot, snowshoe hare, wolverine; 10. Herbivores: bighorn/dall sheep, ptarmigan, ground squirrel, pika, marmot, snowshoe hare; Carnivore: wolverine Matching Answers: 1. bighorn/dall sheep, 2. white-tailed ptarmigan, 3. ground squirrel, 4. pika, 5. marmot, 6. snowshoe hare, 7. wolverine

Author dedication Illustrator Dedication Thanks to for verifying the accuracy of the information in this book. Publisher's Cataloging-In-Publication Data Author Last, First. Title / by author ; illustrated by illustrator. [32] p. : col. ill. ; cm. Summary: ISBN: (hardcover) ISBN: (pbk.) Also available as ebooks featuring auto-flip, auto-read, 3D-page-curling, and selectable English and Spanish text and audio Interest level: 004-009 Grade level: P-4 ATOS TM Level: Lexile Level: Lexile Code: 1. xxxxxx. 2. xxxxx. 3. xxxxx. 4. xxxxx. 5. xxxxx. 6. xxxxx. 7. xxxxx. I. I last name, First. II. Title. XXXX.X.XXX XXX XXXX XXX.XXX LCCN here Text Copyright 2011 by Donna Love Illustration Copyright 2011 by Shennen Bersani The For Creative Minds educational section may be copied by the owner for personal use or by educators using copies in classroom settings. Manufactured in China, month, year This product conforms to CPSIA 2008 First Printing Sylvan Dell Publishing 976 Houston Northcutt Blvd., Suite 3 Mt. Pleasant, SC 29464 The Glaciers Are Melting! ISBN 978-1607181262 51695 www.sylvandellpublishing.com 9 781607 181262