DINO TRACES. Lesson Plan. Skullduggery, Inc. 624 South B Street Tustin, CA (800) FAX (714)

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "DINO TRACES. Lesson Plan. Skullduggery, Inc. 624 South B Street Tustin, CA (800) FAX (714)"

Transcription

1 DINO TRACES Lesson Plan Skullduggery, Inc. 624 South B Street Tustin, CA (800) FAX (714)

2 DINO TRACES OBJECTIVE Dino Traces is a fascinating educational kit that introduces students to the type of evidence found at a typical dinosaur dig. Much like paleontologists excavating real skeletal remains, students will uncover the skeletal parts of a dinosaur by rubbing casts of bone impressions on paper. They will be challenged to identify the dinosaur to which the skeleton belonged. At the completion of this activity students should be able to (1) identify and classify certain dinosaurs, (2) use deductive reasoning to create a complete dinosaur skeleton from scattered evidence and (3) understand some of the complicated techniques used to preserve a paleontological dig site. MATERIALS PROVIDED Information about the dinosaur featured in the kit. Instructions explaining how to use the plaques. Suggested exercises and topics for class discussion. Suggested reading list. 6 plaques containing skeletal parts of a dinosaur. 6 high quality crayons for optimal tracing results. Skeletal key with example of correct positioning of bones. Dinosaur outline guide. MATERIALS NEEDED Paper- Most papers are good for this exercise. Thin, pliable paper is the best. Examples: Kraft paper, brown paper towel, FAX paper and unprinted newspaper. NOTE: The paper size should be a minimum of 8½" X 20". If you are using 8½" X 11" sheets, just tape or paste 2 sheets together. Copyright 1996 Skullduggery, Inc. Page -2- Dino Traces

3 Instructions The students in your class are members of a famous team of paleontologists. They have just excavated a dig site with a remarkable number of interesting looking bones. It is their job to determine whether this new site is of any scientific importance. Is it worth further investigation? Dino Traces can be used at three different levels of difficulty. Level One is the simplest and will be the one most suitable for younger children. Level Two provides additional challenges for the more advanced students. And, of course, Level Three will be for the most advanced students. Direct your class to observe one of the three levels of instruction in piecing together the mystery of the dinosaur bones. The Dino Traces diagrams can be posted anytime to assist students having difficulty assembling the skeleton sections. Read the information on Finding a Dinosaur Bone and Dinosaurs on Display out loud to your class. Then refer to the directions on the level you have chosen for your students. After completing the rubbing, each group should answer the questions listed under Discussion Questions. Advise them to use the Exercise Sheet if they need assistance with the questions. NOTE: Many of the questions listed are open ended questions and are designed to encourage discussion within groups. They do not necessarily have right or wrong answers. Page -3- Dino Traces

4 Finding a Dinosaur Bone Imagine you are hiking in the badlands of South Dakota with a group of friends and you trip over a rock. As you struggle to regain your balance, you notice that what you tripped over was not a rock at all. Upon closer inspection, you realize, with increasing excitement, that this rock looks much like the bone of a very large animal. Could it be the bone of an ancient dinosaur? What should you do? You want to pick it up and take it home, but should you? What is the harm? Finding a dinosaur bone is indeed an exciting experience. Many people, upon finding such a unique fossil, would not hesitate to take it home to add it to their collections. The temptation is very great. But removing the fossil from the spot you found it would cause a loss of valuable scientific information. Following up a find of even one bone could lead to the unearthing of a whole dinosaur skeleton, and to the discovery of valuable information about what that dinosaur was like and what it did when it was alive millions of years ago. Should you be lucky enough to find a fossil bone, it would be best to contact a professional paleontologist. He or she will carefully and systematically excavate the area for more bones and chart the position of each bone found. If necessary, the paleontologist will assemble a team of skilled amateurs and professionals experienced in conducting a systematic search of the area. Armed with a knowledge of geology and dinosaur anatomy, they will prospect the area to determine where the rest of the bones, if any, might be buried. The bones of a single dinosaur skeleton all generally lie at the same level in the rock. Should the team find such a skeleton, they might need to bring in heavy equipment to remove tons of overlying rock and sediment overburden. After most of the overburden is removed with pneumatic drills and explosives, the team will work carefully with fine tools to expose the bones. Then, as each bone is uncovered, the team will carefully chart and record its location on a map. The site will be photographed to back up the map s information. Such photos and maps are essential to the excavation; they permanently record how the skeleton was preserved in rock. This information can later be used to determine how the animal died, whether its skeleton was scavenged, and how it was transported and finally buried. Each bone will then be carefully jacketed (encased) in plaster for transport to a museum s laboratory. Once the bones arrive, delicate work will remove the protective coating and remaining rock from the specimen. It may take days to completely clean just a single bone. The bones will then be laid out and compared Page -4- Dino Traces

5 with field sketches, maps, photographs, and descriptions of known dinosaurs to securely determine their identities. Finally, it will become the paleontologists job to identify the dinosaur and perhaps to fit its bones back together for public display. Dinosaurs on Display By studying complete dinosaur skeletons, paleontologists know where to place each bone. No matter what size, all dinosaurs have many similar features. They all have thigh bones (femurs), shoulder blades (scapulas) and backbones (vertebrae). Armed with that knowledge, paleontologists at least know where to begin. But every so often, mistakes have been made in the reconstruction of a skeleton. As more information is learned about a particular dinosaur these mistakes can be corrected. Mounting even a medium-size dinosaur skeleton for display is a very large undertaking. Once the entire skeleton is laid out and the position of each bone is determined, the experts are ready to reconstruct or mount the dinosaur. Because many dinosaur bones are so heavy, it is very important to create a strong base on which to secure the skeleton. Strips and pillars of steel are constructed for support. In some cases strong, transparent wires suspend from the display room ceiling to hold up parts of the skeleton. When the bones are finally in place, the steel supports and strings will be very hard to see. The dinosaur will look as if it is standing on its own. This is your chance to be a paleontologist. Using the Dino Traces rubbings, try to determine which dinosaur has been unearthed and what its skeleton might look like when assembled. Page -5- Dino Traces

6 Level 1 1. Divide your class into 6 groups. 2. Provide each group with a plaque, a crayon and enough paper for each student in the group. Be certain everyone in the class is working on the same dinosaur during Level Have each group choose one member to begin the exercise. 4. The first student should place paper on the plaque then rub the crayon firmly and evenly over the paper. The outline of the bones should appear. NOTE: Most plaques have more than one bone, so students should be sure to rub every bone on each plaque. 5. Every other student in the group may then take his or her turn to do the same rubbing as the first student. 6. The groups should then exchange plaques. 7. Repeat these procedures until every group has taken a rubbing of each bone on every plaque. 8. Once the rubbings are completed, instruct the students to carefully cut out each bone from the paper with scissors. 9. Tell them to arrange the pieces on their desks into the correct form of the chosen dinosaur. 10. If your students are having trouble assembling their pieces into a shape approaching the correct dinosaur, post a copy of the corresponding enclosed diagram to help them along. Note: Allow sufficient time to play with the pieces before posting the diagram. 11. If your students need additional help in placing bones to reconstruct a complete dinosaur, provide each student with an outline of the dinosaur. The students should paste the bones directly on the outline. NOTE: The provided outline must be copied on legal size paper with an expansion factor of 25%. 12. You may want to instruct your students to arrange their pieces on a sheet of light colored construction paper. When they have the pieces correctly positioned, they can paste them to the construction paper. This will give them something to take home. NOTE: The length of a completed skeleton can be up to 19 inches, so the paper you use to arrange the cut out pieces on should be at least 20" X 8½". Taping or gluing two 8½" X 11" sheets of paper together works well. 13. Instruct the students in each group to use their completed dinosaur to answer the questions and complete the exercises provided. Some of the open- ended questions do not necessarily have right or wrong answers; they just give students a chance to use their imaginations. Page -6- Dino Traces

7 1. Follow steps 1 3 from level 1. Level 2 2. Post a copy of the enclosed dinosaur diagram for the corresponding dinosaur you have chosen to use. 3. Instruct group members to find the location of the bone from their plaque on the dinosaur diagram. Then let them attempt to make their rubbing in the same location and position on their paper. The idea is to color the bones directly on the paper in the correct positions, so that no further manipulation is necessary after the final bone has been rubbed. This method will take quite a bit more patience and dexterity than level 1. If you feel your students are not currently capable of this type of exercise, then refer to level Instruct them to completely color the area of the paper immediately above the chosen bone with firm, even strokes of their crayon. (NOTE: They should only color the area directly above the chosen section, being careful not to overlap onto other parts of the paper. 5. Repeat steps 3 & 4 with the remaining bones on the plaque. 6. Instruct them to exchange plaques and again repeat steps 3 & Continue exchanging plaques until each group has taken a rubbing of each bone on every plaque. 8. After they have finished, have them examine their tracing paper (referred to as a rubbing). Ask them whether the dinosaur skeleton looks familiar. Are some of the bones out of place? If it does not look right, have them return to step 1 and start again. If the rubbing looks fine, have them proceed to step Instruct them to examine their rubbings and answer the questions provided. Some of the open-ended questions do not necessarily have right or wrong answers, they give the students a chance to use their imaginations. NOTE: The length of a completed skeleton may be up to 19 inches, so the paper used for the rubbings should be at least 20" X 8½". Taping or gluing two 8½" X 11" sheets of paper together works well. After all the exercises have been satisfactorily completed, have the students proceed to the next dino-plaque and start with step 1, using the appropriate method. Page -7- Dino Traces

8 Level 3 This level can be used only if your class has obtained more than one edition of Dino Traces. 1. Mix up all the dino plaques. 2. Have students make rubbings of each plaque 3. Have them cut out each rubbing. 4. They should then attempt to sort the pieces into the correct dinosaur groups. Correct assembly of the dinosaur skeletons can be checked against the diagrams provided. 5. Answer questions and exercises provided. Page -8- Dino Traces

9 Triceratops The Triceratops is one of the most easily recognized dinosaurs. Its Greek name, when translated to English, means three (tri), horn (Keratos), face (ops). Oddly enough, the first fossils found of this dinosaur were the remains of two horns, which at first were thought to be the remains of a bison. As you can imagine it is very difficult to correctly identify a dinosaur from a badly incomplete skeleton. Only when the additional remains were found was it determined to be a Triceratops. Triceratops was enormous. The horns above its eyes were as much as 3 feet long; the frill on the back of its head was up to 7 feet wide! From its nose to the tip of its tail, this awesome creature was at least 25 feet long. Some paleontologists speculate that Triceratops used its horns and frill to defend itself against predators such as Tyrannosaurus. It may also have used them for fighting with other Triceratops for territory or to win mates. Triceratops was an herbivore (plant eater). Its sharply pointed teeth did not crush or grind ordinary leafy tissue, seeds or fruit. Instead its powerful jaw muscles worked the teeth like cutting blades. It is thought that Triceratops consumed fibrous plants, such as palm fronds, by slicing them up with their teeth. The Triceratops lived during the very end of the late Cretaceous period (68 to 65 million years ago). In the United States, plentiful remains of this fascinating dinosaur are found in Colorado, Wyoming, Montana and South Dakota. In Canada, Triceratops are found in Alberta and Saskatchewan. Page -9- Dino Traces

10 Velociraptor This small, carnivorous (meat-eating) dinosaur was one of the principal characters in the very popular movie Jurassic Park. The size of a wolf, it was very fast and smart; but in reality, Velociraptor was certainly not as smart as the ones portrayed in the movie. The name Velociraptor derives from Latin and means, velox swift (velox) robber (raptor). The distinguishing feature of the Velociraptor was the sickle-like claw on its second toe of each foot. These small dinosaurs may have hunted larger prey in packs. They would hold the victim with their long fingers while slashing with sickle claws on their feet. They had long, narrow mouths and many sharp teeth with which to eat their prey. Velociraptor had relatively large eye sockets, which leads scientist to believe that this dinosaur had extremely good eye sight, perhaps even night vision for hunting at dawn or dusk. Velociraptor lived during the middle of the late Cretaceous period (85 to 80 million years ago). Skeletons of this rare dinosaur have been found in Mongolia, China and perhaps Russia. Page -10- Dino Traces

11 Tyrannosaurus Tyrannosaurus rex is without a doubt the most famous and popular of all dinosaurs. On land it was the most powerful and largest carnivore (meat eater) that ever lived. A large Tyrannosaurus rex would measure more than 40 feet long. The name Tyrannosaurus comes from Greek, meaning tyrant ( tyrannos) lizard (saurus). The skull of Tyrannosaurus rex was enormous; large ones measured nearly 5 feet long. The jaws were massive and contained huge, thick teeth. Some teeth were 11 inches long from root to tip, and were serrated and able to punch through meat and bone. Like many of its relatives, Tyrannosaurus rex had a movable joint in the lower jaw that allowed it to open its massive jaws wide enough to rip off as much as 500 lbs of meat in one bite. From studying the skull, scientists think that Tyrannosaurus rex had keen eye sight, good hearing and a strong sense of smell. Tyrannosaurus rex was a skilled hunter. Its massive hind legs were very powerful and allowed it to run as fast as 25 miles per hour. It could chase down any prey it might desire, holding the victim with its claws while devouring it with its large mouth. The arms and hands of Tyrannosaurus rex were about a yard long--small in comparison with the huge body, but actually very strong! Tyrannosaurus rex lived during the Late Cretaceous period (68 to 65 millions years ago). Its remains are found in Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, South Dakota and Western Canada. Page -11- Dino Traces

12 Discussion Questions The following questions may be answered in group discussion or individually. Make copies of this sheet, the corresponding dinosaur information sheet, the time line and the exercise sheet and hand them out to each group or individual. Ask them to read the relevant dinosaur information and then answer the following questions: A. General questions about the rubbing. 1. What kind of dinosaur have you uncovered? How can you tell? 2. How long do you think it has been here? (Hint: look on your timeline) 3. In what time period(s) did it exist? 4. Why do you think it ended up here? B. Let the students (or group) make up their own story. 5 In what part of the world do you think this dinosaur was uncovered? What makes you think so? 6. What could this picture tell scientists about our planet? 7. What do you think the scientists will do with this new discovery? C. Specific questions about the rubbing. 1. How many different parts of the dinosaur can you label? What are they? 2. How many claws can you see? 3. How many teeth can you count? 4. How many ribs can you count? 5. How many legs did this dinosaur have? 6. Do you think this dinosaur was fast or slow? How can you tell? 7. Can you tell what the diet of this dinosaur might have been from the information provided? 8. Was this dinosaur a herbivore, carnivore, or omnivore? 9. If dinosaurs and people were living at the same time, do you think this dinosaur would have been friendly to people? Explain. 10. Name 5 other animals that were living at the time of dinosaurs. (Hint: look on your timeline) 11. Name 5 plants that were living at the time of dinosaurs. 12. Are there any dinosaurs alive today? What do you think happened to them? 13. Draw a picture of what you think the dinosaur looked like when it was alive. Page -12- Dino Traces

13 Exercise Sheet Herbivore, Name Time Period Carnivore or Names of other plants & animals Omnivore alive during same period Page -13- Dino Traces

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24 Other reading material For the young reader Aliki. Digging Up Dinosaurs. New York: Harper & Row, Aliki. Fossils Tell of Long Ago. New York: Crowell, Arnold, Caroline. Trapped-In-Tar: Fossils from the Ice Age. New York: Clarion Books-Houghton Mifflin Co., Berenstain, Michael. The Biggest Dinosaur. New York: Western Publishing Co., Carrick, C. Patrick's Dinosaur. New York: Clarion Books, Horner, R. John & James Gorman. Maia: A Dinosaur Grows Up. Bozeman: Museum Of The Rockies, Horner, John R. & Don Lessem. Digging Up Tyrannosaurus Rex. New York: Crown Publishers, Inc., Lauber, P. The News About Dinosaurs. Bradbury Press, Lauber, P. Dinosaurs Walked Here. New York: Macmillan Most, Bernard. If the Dinosaurs Came Back. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, O'Neill, Mary. Where Are All the Dinosaurs? Mahwah, New Jersey: Troll Associates, Ranger Rick's Dinosaur Book. Washington D.C.: National Wildlife Foundation, Sattler, Helen Roney. Baby Dinosaurs. New York: Lothrop, Lee, and Shepard Books, Giants from the Past. National Geographic Society, For the general reader Benton, Michael. On the Trail of the Dinosaurs. London: Grisewood & Dempsey, Chicago's Dinosaurs at The Field Museum. Chicago: Field Museum of Natural History, Horner, John R. & James Gorman. Digging Dinosaurs. New York: Workman Publishing, Horner, John R. & Don Lessem. The Complete T. rex. New York: Simon & Schuster, Kricher, John C. Dinosaurs: Peterson First Guide. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, Lambert, David. A Field Guide to Prehistoric Life. Facts on File, Lambert, David. A Field Guide to Early Man. Facts on File, Lambert, David. The Dinosaur Data Book. Avon Books, Norman, David. The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs. New York: Crescent Books, Norman, David & Angela Milner. Eyewitness Books: Dinosaur. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Sattler, Helen Roney. Dinosaurs of North America. New York: Lothrop, Lee, and Shepard Books, Wilford, John Noble. The Riddle of the Dinosaur. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, For the teacher Ranger Rick's NatureScope: Digging Into Dinosaurs. Washington, D.C.: National Wildlife Federation, Resource Guide to Discovering Dinosaurs. Philadelphia: The Academy of Natural Science, Schatz, Dennis. Dinosaurs: A Journey Through Time: A Children's Activity Book with Adult Teaching Guide. Seattle: Pacific Science Center, VanCleave, Janice. Janice VanCleave's Dinosaurs for Every Kid: Easy Activities that Make Learning Science Fun. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc, West, Linda. Dinosaurs and Dinosaur National Monument: A Resource Packet for Students and Teachers. Jensen, Utah: Dinosaur Nature Association, Educational Kits and Supplies Fossil Kit I... $75.00 Shipping... $ Fossil Kit II... $75.00 Shipping... $ Fossilworks (6 fossil molds)... $50.00 Shipping... $ Animal Tracks... $50.00 Shipping... $ Dino Traces, Velociraptor... $55.00 Shipping... $ Dino Traces, Triceratops... $55.00 Shipping... $ Dino Traces, Tyrannosaurus rex... $55.00 Shipping... $ Human Traces... $55.00 Shipping... $ Animal Bites... $95.00 Shipping... $ Hydrostone (10 lbs.)... $10.00 Shipping... $ Clay (10#, 40 sticks)... $13.00 Shipping... $6.00 Multiple items are combined for reduced shipping & handling, call for quote. Page -24- Dino Traces

Dinosaur Traces. Dinosaurs first roamed Earth 200 million years ago during the Jurassic period.

Dinosaur Traces. Dinosaurs first roamed Earth 200 million years ago during the Jurassic period. Dinosaur Traces Dinosaurs first roamed Earth 200 million years ago during the Jurassic period. Sometime during the late Cretaceous period (approximately 70 million years ago) the dinosaurs died off. Today,

More information

Dinosaur Discovery. KindergarTen-second. Science TEKS. Vocabulary

Dinosaur Discovery. KindergarTen-second. Science TEKS. Vocabulary Dinosaur Discovery KindergarTen-second Science TEKS Kindergarten: K.2A, K.3C, K.10A, K.9B First Grade: 1.2A, 1.2D, 1.2E, 1.9C, 1.10A, 1.10C, 1.10D Second Grade: 2.2A, 2.3C, 2.9a, 2.9C, 2.10A Vocabulary

More information

3rd-4th Grade. The Fossilization Process Flip Chart

3rd-4th Grade. The Fossilization Process Flip Chart 3rd-4th Grade The Fossilization Process Flip Chart Step 1 Page 2 Step 1 Apologetics What are fossils? A fossil is any trace left by something that lived in the past. Animals, plants, and humans have all

More information

Lesson Eight The Meeting of the Dinosaurs Evidence Given by Dinosaur Footprints

Lesson Eight The Meeting of the Dinosaurs Evidence Given by Dinosaur Footprints Lesson Eight The Meeting of the Dinosaurs Evidence Given by Dinosaur Footprints Summary During the first set of activities, students focused on the basics, learning about rocks, minerals, time, and fossils.

More information

FoSSil Puzzler (1 Hour)

FoSSil Puzzler (1 Hour) FoSSil Puzzler (1 Hour) Addresses NGSS Level of Difficulty: 2 Grade Range: 3-5 OVERVIEW Students will examine and sketch various trace fossils from an unknown creature and then construct an image of the

More information

Evidence for the Theory of Evolution (Adapted from: Prentice Hall Laboratory Manual)

Evidence for the Theory of Evolution (Adapted from: Prentice Hall Laboratory Manual) Evidence for the Theory of Evolution (Adapted from: Prentice Hall Laboratory Manual) NGSSS: SC.912.L.15.1 Explain the scientific theory of evolution is supported by the fossil record, comparative anatomy,

More information

PSI Paleo Sleuth Investigation Grades 4-8

PSI Paleo Sleuth Investigation Grades 4-8 PSI Paleo Sleuth Investigation Grades 4-8 Paleo Sleuth Investigations, or PSI, includes four activities to be used in succession that focus around fossils in Nebraska and the Ashfall Fossil Beds State

More information

Dino Detectives 60 Minute Life Science Lesson Science- To- Go Program Grades: 2-4. Dino Detectives

Dino Detectives 60 Minute Life Science Lesson Science- To- Go Program Grades: 2-4. Dino Detectives TEACHER GUIDE Dino Detectives 60 Minute Life Science Lesson Science- To- Go Program Grades: 2-4 Dino Detectives Description Calling all Jr. paleontologists: we need your help to identify the latest fossilized

More information

PRACTICES OF PALEONTOLOGY

PRACTICES OF PALEONTOLOGY MOR PRACTICE 02 PRACTICES OF PALEONTOLOGY Activity Overview BIG IDEA Many specific steps and techniques are followed and used between asking permission and discovering a fossil to museum research and display.

More information

When this huge dinosaur roamed Earth, others got out of the way

When this huge dinosaur roamed Earth, others got out of the way When this huge dinosaur roamed Earth, others got out of the way By Deborah Netburn, Los Angeles Times on 09.09.14 Word Count 920 Dr. Kenneth Lacovara, a paleontologist at Drexel University, looks over

More information

What happened Before. reflect

What happened Before. reflect reflect Sea shells seem to be everywhere. Most of the time, you will find them on beaches. But every now and then, you might find them far from the sea. For example, you might find a shell stuck in a rock

More information

Discovery Quest 2-3. Chaperone Guide

Discovery Quest 2-3. Chaperone Guide Discovery Quest 2-3 Chaperone Guide Chaperone: Partner this guide with the 2-3 Discovery Quest Worksheet. This guide will help you lead students through the natural history exhibits of the Pink Palace

More information

Discovering Dinosaurs A Reading A Z Level O Leveled Book Word Count: 750

Discovering Dinosaurs A Reading A Z Level O Leveled Book Word Count: 750 Discovering Dinosaurs A Reading A Z Level O Leveled Book Word Count: 750 LEVELED BOOK O Connections Writing and Art Imagine you are a scientist studying dinosaurs and have discovered new fossils. Draw

More information

Evolution Revolution Pre and Post Visit Materials. Kenosha Public Museum st Avenue Kenosha, WI

Evolution Revolution Pre and Post Visit Materials. Kenosha Public Museum st Avenue Kenosha, WI Evolution Revolution Pre and Post Visit Materials Kenosha Public Museum 5500 1st Avenue Kenosha, WI Kenosha Public Museum Evolution Revolution Evolution Revolution is an hour long museum experience designed

More information

Focus on Fossils. Third - Fifth. Earth Science TEKS. Vocabulary

Focus on Fossils. Third - Fifth. Earth Science TEKS. Vocabulary Focus on Fossils Third - Fifth Earth Science TEKS Third Grade: 3.7A Fourth Grade: 4.7B Fifth Grade: 5.7A, 5.7D Vocabulary decomposition, deposition, erosion, extinct, fossil, paleontologist, relative dating,

More information

MOR FOSSILS TEACHERS. Making a Fossil Activity Overview BIG IDEA

MOR FOSSILS TEACHERS. Making a Fossil Activity Overview BIG IDEA Making a Fossil Activity Overview BIG IDEA OBJECTIVE BACKGROUND Not every organism that died, including dinosaurs, left behind a fossil. Explore fossilization with this activity. Students will follow a

More information

MOR TIME TEACHERS. ONCE UPON A TIME Activity Overview BIG IDEA

MOR TIME TEACHERS. ONCE UPON A TIME Activity Overview BIG IDEA MOR TIME 04 Activity Overview BIG IDEA OBJECTIVE BACKGROUND The geologic time scale can be challenging for students to understand. This activity explores how scientists divide the Earth s long history

More information

11.4 The Rock Cycle. Rocks and Soils. Objective. Materials. Teacher Tip. Directed Instruction. Content. Introduction

11.4 The Rock Cycle. Rocks and Soils. Objective. Materials. Teacher Tip. Directed Instruction. Content. Introduction 11.4 The Rock Cycle Rocks and Soils Objective Students will explain orally how rocks change form through the rock cycle. Materials Blackline Master 11.4A Discover: The Rock Cycle Blackline Master 11.4B

More information

Topic: The step-by-step process of casting, painting, and assembling a dinosaur skeleton.

Topic: The step-by-step process of casting, painting, and assembling a dinosaur skeleton. Program Overview Topic: The step-by-step process of casting, painting, and assembling a dinosaur skeleton. Theme: The skills and knowledge required in the art and science of casting, painting, and articulating

More information

Background: Comment [1]: Comment [2]: Comment [3]: Comment [4]: mass spectrometry

Background: Comment [1]: Comment [2]: Comment [3]: Comment [4]: mass spectrometry Background: Imagine it is time for your lunch break, you take your sandwich outside and you sit down to enjoy your lunch with a beautiful view of Montana s Rocky Mountains. As you look up, you see what

More information

Digging into the Past Pre-Visit Materials

Digging into the Past Pre-Visit Materials Digging into the Past Pre-Visit Materials Pre-Visit Activities Howard B. Owens Science Center Digging into the Past Pre-Visit The Pre-visit activities are linked to the pre-requisite skills and knowledge

More information

DOWNLOAD OR READ : THE TYRANNOSAURUS GAME PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

DOWNLOAD OR READ : THE TYRANNOSAURUS GAME PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI DOWNLOAD OR READ : THE TYRANNOSAURUS GAME PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI Page 1 Page 2 the tyrannosaurus game the tyrannosaurus game pdf the tyrannosaurus game the tyrannosaurus game Download The Tyrannosaurus Game

More information

Determining the age of fossils

Determining the age of fossils Sea shells seem to be everywhere. Most of the time you will find them on beaches, but every now and then, you may find them far from the sea. For example, you may have found a shell stuck in a rock high

More information

Discovery Quest K-1. Chaperone Guide

Discovery Quest K-1. Chaperone Guide Discovery Quest K-1 Chaperone Guide Chaperone: Partner this guide with the K-1 Discovery Quest Worksheet. This guide will help you lead students through the natural history exhibits of the Pink Palace

More information

Ebook Code: REAU1124. Developing English Skills Through Themes

Ebook Code: REAU1124. Developing English Skills Through Themes Ebook Code: REAU1124 Developing English Skills Through Themes Contents Teachers Notes 4 Curriculum Links 5 Antarctica 6 Activity Sheets 7-11 Dinosaurs 12 Activity Sheets 13-17 Natural Disasters 18 Activity

More information

Fascinating Fossils Grades 4-8

Fascinating Fossils Grades 4-8 Fascinating Fossils Grades 4-8 This activity introduces students to a variety of fossils: large animal bones, small fragment pieces, and microfossils. Students will analyze fossils like that of a field

More information

Background: Imagine it is time for your lunch break, you take your sandwich outside and you sit down to enjoy your lunch with a beautiful view of

Background: Imagine it is time for your lunch break, you take your sandwich outside and you sit down to enjoy your lunch with a beautiful view of Background: Imagine it is time for your lunch break, you take your sandwich outside and you sit down to enjoy your lunch with a beautiful view of Montana s Rocky Mountains. As you look up, you see what

More information

FOSSIL KIT II. Lesson Plan. Skullduggery, Inc E La Palma Anaheim CA (800) FAX (714)

FOSSIL KIT II. Lesson Plan. Skullduggery, Inc E La Palma Anaheim CA (800) FAX (714) FOSSIL KIT II Lesson Plan Skullduggery, Inc. 5433 E La Palma Anaheim CA 92807 (800) 336-7745 FAX (714) 777-4475 FOSSIL KIT II OBJECTIVE Fossil Kit I takes students on an interactive journey into the fascinating

More information

Fossils ACTIVITY I: FOSSILIZATION. Activity 1 is for K 2 nd. Activities I and II are for 3 rd 5 th

Fossils ACTIVITY I: FOSSILIZATION. Activity 1 is for K 2 nd. Activities I and II are for 3 rd 5 th Fossils Activity 1 is for K 2 nd. Activities I and II are for 3 rd 5 th OVERVIEW How does a living thing become a fossil? The mysterious processes by which evidence of past life is preserved are explored

More information

Activity 1: Rules for collecting fossils (Work in pairs)

Activity 1: Rules for collecting fossils (Work in pairs) Intermediate Phase Grade 4-6 Learning area: Natural Sciences Strand: Life and living Theme: Biodiversity, change and continuity Specific Aim 1: Acquiring knowledge of natural sciences Activity Sheet Activity

More information

Explorations. Dinosaurs and Fossils K-3. n Dino and Fossil Facts. n Classroom Activities. n In-Museum Activities.

Explorations. Dinosaurs and Fossils K-3. n Dino and Fossil Facts. n Classroom Activities. n In-Museum Activities. Explorations Dinosaurs and Fossils K-3 n Dino and Fossil Facts n Classroom Activities n In-Museum Activities n Chaperone Guide IN THIS GUIDE Explore dinosaur skeletons and fossils of ancient life in the

More information

Explore! Fossils Original Air Date: January 28, 2015 Grade Levels: 3-6 Archived Program URL: Program Materials Page URL: Program Description:

Explore! Fossils Original Air Date: January 28, 2015 Grade Levels: 3-6 Archived Program URL: Program Materials Page URL: Program Description: Explore! Fossils Original Air Date: January 28, 2015 Grade Levels: 3-6 Archived Program URL: http://www.hectv.org/video/16389/explore-fossils-january-2015/ Program Materials Page URL: http://www.hectv.org/teachers/curriculum/hec-tv-live/explorefossils/

More information

CRETACEOUS ALBERTA SCIENCE HALL. 1. This exhibit is based on a discovery made in

CRETACEOUS ALBERTA SCIENCE HALL. 1. This exhibit is based on a discovery made in Worksheet Level 3 p. 1 CRETACEOUS ALBERTA 1. This exhibit is based on a discovery made in 2. What type of dinosaur was found at this site, how many individuals were there, and what was their age range?

More information

FOSSIL FINDERS Lesson Plan by: Caitlin Schrein NSF Graduate teaching fellow, Arizona State University

FOSSIL FINDERS Lesson Plan by: Caitlin Schrein NSF Graduate teaching fellow, Arizona State University Objectives: Before beginning the lesson, the students should be able to: Explain very generally how fossils form and in what types of rocks fossils are found. After the lesson, the students should be able

More information

Background Reading: The Earliest Humans

Background Reading: The Earliest Humans Background Reading: The Earliest Humans What type of information do you need to look for in the reading to learn about who discovered these early humans? List some ideas of what to look for here: 1. 2.

More information

This Planet Rocks. Science Year 3/4B Autumn 1. Rocks. Session 2. Resource Pack

This Planet Rocks. Science Year 3/4B Autumn 1. Rocks. Session 2. Resource Pack Science Year 3/4B Autumn 1 Rocks This Planet Rocks Session 2 Resource Pack Original resource copyright Hamilton Trust, who give permission for it to be adapted as wished by individual users. We refer you

More information

and Fuels OSSIIS Vocabulary Process Skill

and Fuels OSSIIS Vocabulary Process Skill \ Vocabulary fossil, C22 amber, C22 fuel, C26 OSSIIS and Fuels Process Skill The objects captured in this piece of amber were once alive. Now they are fossils. Fossils tell us the story of life on Earth

More information

Fossils. Who studies fossils? How do fossils form? Fossils are the preserved remains or traces of living things.

Fossils. Who studies fossils? How do fossils form? Fossils are the preserved remains or traces of living things. Fossils Essential Questions: What are fossils and how are they formed? What are the different kinds of fossils? What do fossils tell about how organisms have changed over time? Who studies fossils? Scientists

More information

Presented by the Natural History Museum London

Presented by the Natural History Museum London Presented by the Natural History Museum London April 12 September 12, 2013 Dino Jaws is supported by: City of San Diego Commission for Arts and Culture Walter J. and Betty C. Zable Foundation Inside: Exhibition

More information

October 26, SWBAT read a geological time scale and identify important events.

October 26, SWBAT read a geological time scale and identify important events. Aims: October 26, 2016 SWBAT read a geological time scale and identify important events. Agenda 1. Do Now 2. Class Notes 3. Guided Practice 4. Independent Practice 5. Practicing our AIMS: Homework: EH.1

More information

Online Fossil Lab Fossil Formation How Fossils Form 1. Describe the process in which fossils form.

Online Fossil Lab Fossil Formation How Fossils Form 1. Describe the process in which fossils form. Name: Online Fossil Lab Fossil Formation How Fossils Form 1. Describe the process in which fossils form. Period: 2. What is a Mold? 3. What is a cast? Getting into the Fossil Record 4. What is the fossil

More information

Chapter: Clues to Earth s Past

Chapter: Clues to Earth s Past Table of Contents Chapter: Clues to Earth s Past Section : Section 2: Relative Ages of Rocks Section 3: Absolute Ages of Rocks Traces of the Distant Past Paleontologists, scientists who study fossils,

More information

How can fossils tell us about organisms that lived millions of years ago?

How can fossils tell us about organisms that lived millions of years ago? Seashells seem to be everywhere. Most of the time, you will find them on beaches, but every now and then, you may find them far from the sea. For example, you may find a shell stuck in a rock, high on

More information

Tales of the Past. Source: Sci-ber Text with the Utah State Office of Education

Tales of the Past. Source: Sci-ber Text with the Utah State Office of Education Tales of the Past Source: Sci-ber Text with the Utah State Office of Education http://www.uen.org/core/science/sciber/trb4/downloads/literacy4.pdf Do you like mystery and intrigue? Do you like to do detective

More information

Activity 10: Dinosaur habitats

Activity 10: Dinosaur habitats Discover Dippy s world and imagine a day in a dinosaur s life. Learning outcomes Children will: learn that some types of animals and plants that were alive at the same time as the Diplodocus Dippy was

More information

Pollination A Sticky Situation! A lesson from the New Jersey Agricultural Society s Learning Through Gardening program

Pollination A Sticky Situation! A lesson from the New Jersey Agricultural Society s Learning Through Gardening program Pollination A Sticky Situation! A lesson from the New Jersey Agricultural Society s Learning Through Gardening program OVERVIEW: Pollination is a sticky situation. In this active lesson, students learn

More information

NOTES 1. Fossils. The BIG Idea Rocks, fossils, and other types of natural evidence tell Earth s story.

NOTES 1. Fossils. The BIG Idea Rocks, fossils, and other types of natural evidence tell Earth s story. Name Period Date UNIT 6 NOTES 1 Fossils Objectives Identify and describe the types of fossils. Define fossils Explain fossil formation Explain how different kinds of fossils show traces of life from Earth

More information

7 LITTLE GREEN MARTIANS

7 LITTLE GREEN MARTIANS 7 LITTLE GREEN MARTIANS Many People thought the first probes to land on the surface of Mars- Viking I and Viking II- would discover little green Martian men or some other form of extraterrestrial, so there

More information

New dinosaur from Utah's red rocks 23 March 2010

New dinosaur from Utah's red rocks 23 March 2010 New dinosaur from Utah's red rocks 23 March 2010 journal produced by the Public Library of Science. The study was conducted by Joseph Sertich, a former University of Utah master's student and current Stony

More information

Dinosaur Bones. Dinosaur Bones. 1 of 12. Copyright 2007, Exemplars, Inc. All rights reserved.

Dinosaur Bones. Dinosaur Bones. 1 of 12. Copyright 2007, Exemplars, Inc. All rights reserved. Scientists have used the bones of dinosaurs to figure out what they might have looked like, how they moved about and how they lived. We are going to be scientists asking the question, How did the body

More information

Dinosaurs Activity Kit

Dinosaurs Activity Kit Dinosaurs Activity Kit Dinosaur Comparison Dinosaurs differed in many ways, from their coverings to their diets. Fill out as much information as you can about the following dinosaurs, and then draw each

More information

NEWEST DINOSAUR DISCOVERY

NEWEST DINOSAUR DISCOVERY DINOSAURS OF UTAH NEWEST DINOSAUR DISCOVERY Feather from a dinosaur trapped in amber (fossilized resin from extinct trees) Theropod (mainly uses its hind legs to move around) TIME PERIODS Paleozoic 251-542

More information

THE SUN, THE MOON AND OUR SOLAR SYSTEM TEACHER NOTES TO SHARE WITH STUDENTS

THE SUN, THE MOON AND OUR SOLAR SYSTEM TEACHER NOTES TO SHARE WITH STUDENTS THE SUN, THE MOON AND OUR SOLAR SYSTEM TEACHER NOTES TO SHARE WITH STUDENTS The Sun is the biggest feature in our solar system. It is the largest object and contains approximately 98% of the total solar

More information

Do Now HW due Friday 9/30

Do Now HW due Friday 9/30 Do Now HW due Friday 9/30 1. Describe the process of formation of a sedimentary rock. 2. Draw out the rock cycle clearly state how each rock type becomes another rock type. 3. Make a chart and compare

More information

Imagine wolf-sized prehistoric otters opening mollusks with their hands

Imagine wolf-sized prehistoric otters opening mollusks with their hands Imagine wolf-sized prehistoric otters opening mollusks with their hands By Smithsonian.com, adapted by Newsela staff on 01.26.17 Word Count 678 Sugar, a North American river otter, swims in its enclosure

More information

Activity: Dinosaur Footprints Compiled By: Nancy Volk Name:

Activity: Dinosaur Footprints Compiled By: Nancy Volk Name: Activity: Dinosaur Footprints Compiled By: Nancy Volk Name: STEP 1 Sketch out a box that is 40 cm long and 31 cm wide. Inside this box sketch the print for Euoplocephalus. (see sketch) Determine if Euoplocephalus

More information

PREFACE. Sample file. Acknowledgements & Thanks. Credit: U.S. Geological Survey Department of the Interior/USGS Credit: Wikipedia Junior

PREFACE. Sample file. Acknowledgements & Thanks. Credit: U.S. Geological Survey Department of the Interior/USGS Credit: Wikipedia Junior PREFACE This book which is aimed at kindergarten through 6 h grade covers geology, geography, palaeontology, science amidst other lessons in which there is a focus on critical thinking skills, vocabulary,

More information

Paleontology. 5 th Grade

Paleontology. 5 th Grade Paleontology 5 th Grade Introduction 5-10 minutes Geologic Time Scale 15-20 minutes Measuring tape at least 50ft long tabs Trace Fossils Casting materials Molds Water Drying paper Tooth picks cups Strata

More information

Clues to the Past. Grades 6-8 Educational Program Guide

Clues to the Past. Grades 6-8 Educational Program Guide Clues to the Past Grades 6-8 Educational Program Guide OAS Science Practices: 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8 Program Overview The Clues to the Past program will introduce students to several 300 million years old

More information

Subject: Science, Biology, History, Geography

Subject: Science, Biology, History, Geography Digging for Evidence Author: Jacqueline D. Grade Span: 6-8 Assignment Type: Individual, Small Group State: South Carolina Subject: Science, Biology, History, Geography Recommended Time Frame: 9 class periods

More information

Fossils and Relative Dating

Fossils and Relative Dating Fossils and Relative Dating OBJECTIVES I can place everyday events in relative order. I can define laws related to the deposition of sediment in water. I can correlate stacks of layered rocks between different

More information

Dinosaurs roamed Earth millions of years ago. Some dinosaurs were as small as chickens. Others were larger than houses.

Dinosaurs roamed Earth millions of years ago. Some dinosaurs were as small as chickens. Others were larger than houses. Non-fiction: Dinosaur World Dinosaur World The Land Before People Dinosaurs once ruled Earth. Dinosaurs roamed Earth millions of years ago. Some dinosaurs were as small as chickens. Others were larger

More information

Fantastic Fossils Pre and Post Visit Materials. Kenosha Public Museum st Avenue Kenosha, WI

Fantastic Fossils Pre and Post Visit Materials. Kenosha Public Museum st Avenue Kenosha, WI Fantastic Fossils Pre and Post Visit Materials Kenosha Public Museum 5500 1st Avenue Kenosha, WI Kenosha Public Museum Fantastic Fossils Fantastic Fossils is an hour long museum experience designed for

More information

The complete lesson plan for this topic is included below.

The complete lesson plan for this topic is included below. Home Connection Parent Information: Magnets provide a simple way to explore force with children. The power of a magnet is somewhat like magic to them and requires exploration to understand. When forces

More information

7.1 Life in the past. Fossil formation

7.1 Life in the past. Fossil formation 7 The drawing shows an artist s impression of a number of dinosaurs ancient reptiles that lived in eastern Australia about 100 million years ago. From your knowledge of modern-day animals, what evidence

More information

EDUCATOR S GUIDE. Lessons of the Ice Age

EDUCATOR S GUIDE. Lessons of the Ice Age EDUCATOR S GUIDE Lessons of the Ice Age Note: This guide provides additional information for educators to use before, during or after a visit to Ice Age Imperials. The guide is appropriate for all grade

More information

FOSSILS IN YOUR BACKYARD

FOSSILS IN YOUR BACKYARD MOR BACKYARD 12 Activity Overview BIG IDEA OBJECTIVE BACKGROUND Millions of years ago, dinosaurs roamed all over our planet Why is it then that we only find dinosaurs in certain geographical locations?

More information

CLASSROOM NEWS Week of December 5, 2016! jmccool3rdgrade.weebly.com! (302)

CLASSROOM NEWS Week of December 5, 2016! jmccool3rdgrade.weebly.com! (302) CLASSROOM NEWS Week of December 5, 2016! jmccool3rdgrade.weebly.com! (302) 875-6130 This Week.. Student of the Week (McCool-Rm11) Jonathan Chabla Homework Math Homework: Due as listed in agendas. ELA Homework:

More information

Fun with Fossils. Ask a Fossil

Fun with Fossils. Ask a Fossil Fun with Fossils Have you ever found a rock that looks like a bone? Have you seen a rock with the print of a plant on it? These rocks are called fossils. They are made from living things. They have died

More information

Prehistoric Mammals. Sample

Prehistoric Mammals. Sample Prehistoric Mammals Contents Teachers Notes. 4 Student Record Sheet... 6 Mammals for Little Ones... 7 Picturenary... 8 Make the Connection... 9 Fossicking Fossils... 10 Make a Good Impression... 11 A Mammoth

More information

By National Geographic Education Staff

By National Geographic Education Staff Your web browser (Safari 7) is out of date. For more security, comfort and the best experience on this site: Update your browser Ignore PALEO NTO LO GIST: BO LO RTSETSEG MINJIN Real-world geography. Discover

More information

Bluedorn Science Imaginarium Teacher Information

Bluedorn Science Imaginarium Teacher Information Bluedorn Science Imaginarium Teacher Information Before Your Visit Let the students know what to expect during their visit to the Imaginarium and discuss with them what standards of behavior you expect

More information

Lesson 32. The Grain of Wheat. John 12:20-26

Lesson 32. The Grain of Wheat. John 12:20-26 L i f e o f C h r i s t from the gospel of J o h n Lesson 32 The Grain of Wheat John 12:20-26 Mission Arlington Mission Metroplex Curriculum 2010 Created for use with young, unchurched learners Adaptable

More information

This lesson requires a collection of fossils for the students to examine. See the end notes for suggestions on where to obtain specimens.

This lesson requires a collection of fossils for the students to examine. See the end notes for suggestions on where to obtain specimens. Science Unit: Lesson #4: Fossils What is a Fossil? School Year: 2015/2016 Developed for: Developed by: Grade level: Duration of lesson: Notes: George T. Cunningham, Vancouver School District Kate Gregory

More information

BEE BODIES HONEY BEE ANATOMY. Essential Question: MATERIALS. Chart Paper Markers Journals, Paper, or Digital Notebooks

BEE BODIES HONEY BEE ANATOMY. Essential Question: MATERIALS. Chart Paper Markers Journals, Paper, or Digital Notebooks BEE BODIES HONEY BEE ANATOMY LEARNING OBJECTIVES Essential Question: HOW DOES A HONEY BEE S STRUCTURE SUPPORT ITS FUNCTION IN THE ECOSYSTEM? n n n Distinguish between the structural and behavioral adaptations

More information

JOURNALS. BY KIMBERlY HORGWEBB. Discover~ Center

JOURNALS. BY KIMBERlY HORGWEBB. Discover~ Center JOURNALS Fa55iI BY KIMBERlY HORGWEBB Discover~ 20 SIERRA HERITAGE MAGAZINE The Fossil Discovery opportunity During the summer the movie "Jurassic Park" "The greatest thing about the discovery is that hit

More information

Looking at Fossils. Fossilized Organisms. Fossils in Rocks. Fossils in Amber

Looking at Fossils. Fossilized Organisms. Fossils in Rocks. Fossils in Amber 1 Looking at Fossils Key Concept Fossils provide evidence of how life and environmental conditions have changed. What You Will Learn Evidence of past life is preserved as fossils in sedimentary rock and

More information

Concepts: Understand the meaning of words related to dinosaurs and paleontologists; describe dinosaurs; describe the work of paleontologists.

Concepts: Understand the meaning of words related to dinosaurs and paleontologists; describe dinosaurs; describe the work of paleontologists. DY 1 Concept & Vocabulary Development Grade 5 Unit Question of the Week: How can paleontologists help us understand the past? To introduce and discuss concepts and vocabulary related to dinosaurs and paleontology.

More information

Creating Fossil Field Jackets Grade 4-8

Creating Fossil Field Jackets Grade 4-8 Creating Fossil Field Jackets Grade 4-8 Students, as preparators, will make a fossil field jacket using a seashell fossil. Seashells are used because they are larger to manage for this activity and can

More information

FOSSILWORKS. Lesson Plan. Skullduggery, Inc E La Palma Ave Anaheim, CA (800) FAX (714)

FOSSILWORKS. Lesson Plan. Skullduggery, Inc E La Palma Ave Anaheim, CA (800) FAX (714) FOSSILWORKS Lesson Plan Skullduggery, Inc. 5433 E La Palma Ave Anaheim, CA 92807 (800) 336-7745 FAX (714) 777-4475 FOSSILWORKS OBJECTIVE is an exciting activity that will help to foster awareness and appreciation

More information

Lesson 5: Trees. Tell your child that today he is going to learn about trees. Ask him what he knows about trees and how people are dependent on trees.

Lesson 5: Trees. Tell your child that today he is going to learn about trees. Ask him what he knows about trees and how people are dependent on trees. Dirt and Plants -> 5: Trees Lesson 5: Trees Getting Started? Big Ideas P How are people dependent on plants? & Facts and Definitions P Evergreen trees do not change colors in the fall and winter. P Deciduous

More information

By Michelle Rist. Created by Michelle InspiredByKindergarten.blogspot.com

By Michelle Rist. Created by Michelle InspiredByKindergarten.blogspot.com By Michelle Rist Created by Michelle Rist @ InspiredByKindergarten.blogspot.com In my classroom we explain the handwriting house as a house where a Zookeeper lives. When his animal/letter friends come

More information

Name: Date: Period: #: Chapter 1: Outline Notes What Does a Historian Do?

Name: Date: Period: #: Chapter 1: Outline Notes What Does a Historian Do? Name: Date: Period: #: Chapter 1: Outline Notes What Does a Historian Do? Lesson 1.1 What is History? I. Why Study History? A. History is the study of the of the past. History considers both the way things

More information

Challenger Center Teacher Resources for Engaging Students in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math

Challenger Center Teacher Resources for Engaging Students in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math Challenger Center Teacher Resources for Engaging Students in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math Designed for Grades 5-8 These resources are brought to you by: Human Bodies on Mars Prep Time 30

More information

Back to the Pleistocene: The Ice Age Graveyards Exhibit at the Indiana State Museum

Back to the Pleistocene: The Ice Age Graveyards Exhibit at the Indiana State Museum From The Rostrum, Volume 27, Number 1, January, 2018: Back to the Pleistocene: The Ice Age Graveyards Exhibit at the Indiana State Museum Michael Hutchins On Saturday, September 14 th, 2017, I took off

More information

Inflatable Planetarium

Inflatable Planetarium Inflatable Planetarium The use of a planetarium can greatly excite young students about the universe around them. In addition to being cool, universe science is a standard for several grade levels. This

More information

TH E FOSSIL RE C O R D

TH E FOSSIL RE C O R D Adriana, I could not view the guides to check column and photo placement on this chapter. Guides would not turn TH E FOSSIL RE C O R D OF BATS No Evolutionary Ancestors of Bats Have Been Discovered! Scientists

More information

Think about the landforms where you live. How do you think they have changed over time? How do you think they will change in the future?

Think about the landforms where you live. How do you think they have changed over time? How do you think they will change in the future? reflect All the landforms on Earth have changed over time and continue to change. Many of the changes were caused by wind, moving water, and moving ice. Mountains have grown and shrunk. Rivers have cut

More information

paleo sharks Paleo bugs TEACHER S GUIDe 3-7

paleo sharks Paleo bugs TEACHER S GUIDe 3-7 paleo sharks Paleo bugs TEACHER S GUIDe GRADES 3-7 Introduction PALEO SHARKS and PALEO BUGS Written and Illustrated by Timothy J. Bradley Whether you imagine giant sea creatures cruising ancient oceans

More information

1 Looking at Fossils. What are fossils? How are fossils formed? What can fossils tell us about the history of life on earth?

1 Looking at Fossils. What are fossils? How are fossils formed? What can fossils tell us about the history of life on earth? CHAPTER 9 SECTION The History of Life on Earth 1 Looking at Fossils California Science Standards 7.3.c, 7.4.c, 7.4.e BEFORE YOU READ After you read this section, you should be able to answer these questions:

More information

AGN. discover how. discoveries. Science.

AGN. discover how. discoveries. Science. AGN NETISM RADE ASSESSMENT PACKET A comprehensive course that teaches the big ideas behind Maxwell s Principles. You ll discover how to detectt magnetic poles and magnetic fields, learn about electromagnetismm

More information

3: Super Saguaro Based on the Arizona quarter reverse

3: Super Saguaro Based on the Arizona quarter reverse 3: Super Saguaro Based on the Arizona quarter reverse OBJECTIVE Students will understand the life cycle of the saguaro cactus and identify different animals which call the saguaro home. MATERIALS 1 overhead

More information

What Can We Learn From The Rock Record?

What Can We Learn From The Rock Record? Name Mrs. Krieger Fossil Record: Go to the following web site: What Can We Learn From The Rock Record? ucmp.berkeley.edu/education/explotime.html Date Click on: Getting Into the Fossil Record. Click on:

More information

Changes to Land 5.7B. landforms: features on the surface of Earth such as mountains, hills, dunes, oceans and rivers

Changes to Land 5.7B. landforms: features on the surface of Earth such as mountains, hills, dunes, oceans and rivers All the landforms on Earth have changed over time and continue to change. Many of the changes were caused by wind, moving water, and moving ice. Mountains have grown and shrunk. Rivers have cut away land

More information

Mini 4-H. Developed by Area VII Extension Youth Educators Draft Purdue University Cooperative Extension Service

Mini 4-H. Developed by Area VII Extension Youth Educators Draft Purdue University Cooperative Extension Service & Mini 4-H Developed by Area VII Extension Youth Educators Draft Purdue University Cooperative Extension Service Mini 4-Her's Page a special to Mini 4-H! are now a of the 4-H family. You Mini have lots

More information

Saturday Science Lesson Plan Fall 2008

Saturday Science Lesson Plan Fall 2008 Saturday Science Lesson Plan Fall 2008 LEARNING OBJECTIVES STANDARDS 1.1.1 Observe, describe, draw, and sort objects carefully to learn about them. 1.2.6 Describe and compare objects in terms of number,

More information

Orbital Paths. the Solar System

Orbital Paths. the Solar System Purpose To compare the lengths of the terrestrial planets orbital paths and revolution times. Process Skills Measure, form a hypothesis, predict, observe, collect data, interpret data, communicate, draw

More information

A Journey Back in Time

A Journey Back in Time A Trip Through Geologic Time TEACHER NOTES Lab zonetm A Journey Back in Time The following steps will walk you through the. Use the hints and detailed directions as you guide your students through planning,

More information

If searched for the ebook Discovery of T.Rex in pdf format, then you've come to the right website. We presented the utter variation of this book in

If searched for the ebook Discovery of T.Rex in pdf format, then you've come to the right website. We presented the utter variation of this book in Discovery Of T.Rex If searched for the ebook Discovery of T.Rex in pdf format, then you've come to the right website. We presented the utter variation of this book in epub, txt, DjVu, doc, PDF forms. You

More information

WEEK 1 THE BIBLE BIG IDEA WELCOME TIME DISCUSSION TIME TEACHING TIME PLAY TIME PRESCHOOL LESSON OUTLINE THIS WEEK AT A GLANCE

WEEK 1 THE BIBLE BIG IDEA WELCOME TIME DISCUSSION TIME TEACHING TIME PLAY TIME PRESCHOOL LESSON OUTLINE THIS WEEK AT A GLANCE WEEK 1 PRESCHOOL LESSON OUTLINE BIG IDEA Jesus cares about us when we are sick. THE BIBLE Jesus Heals the Leper: Luke 5:12-15 THIS WEEK AT A GLANCE WELCOME TIME ACTIVITY Play-Doh Unbelievable Scenes ACTIVITY

More information