OK I know these are supposed to be kid books but they are awesome! Great pictures and just enough text to make you want to learn more. Great choices for a beginning history reader or to start an older reader out in a new area. Every time I pick one of these up and read it I learn new things. Highly Recommended
AR Quiz No. 17241 EN Nonfiction Accelerated Reader Quiz Information IL: MG - BL: 7.6 - AR Pts: 1.0 Accelerated Reader Quiz Type Information AR Quiz Types: RP
Seashore, by Steve Parker is a great nonfiction book to teach your kids about the seashore. This book has things about the living things on shore, or under the sea. It is fun to read and helps you learn about it at the same time. I read it and it taught me stuff I didn't even know about. I rated this book 4 out of 5 stars because it was a good book and I liked it. I would recommend this book for all ages.
Compact but stuffed with great illustrations, science information, and hands-on things to try. My son's outgrown it, so it's going to his school's library.
My libraries copy has a different cover but I think it's the same book. There are not as many animals in this book as the other ocean books I've used in lessons (only starfish,crabs, lobster, seal are large). This book has large or detailed photographs of seaweed, anemones and shells etc. Each page is a different type of thing found on the shore, which makes it not the best book for my coral drawing lesson, but would work still if I didn't have more specific books on coral.
This is a 63-page book full of colour, photos, and drawings. This is such a wonderfully informative book about the plants and animals that live close to the shore. Contents: The World of the Seashore; Shaping the Shoreline; The Holdfast Habitat; Shells of the Shore; Gripping the Rock; Inside a Tide Pool; Tide-pool Fish; Flower-like Animals; Tentacles and Stings; Stars of the Sea; Borers and Builders; Hard Cases; Unusual Partnerships; Disguises; Life on a Ledge; Feeding by the Sea; Visitors to the Shore; Beachcombing; Preserving Our Shores.
In the eyewitness book series, the Seashore provides many facts about what goes on towards land. Things that are in a Seashore can range from rocks to plants to animals. Plants and animals that are held in seashores are seaweed, starfish, blennies, gobies, anemones, sea urchins, and crabs. Sometimes, certain animals need each other to live. For example, parasitic anemones grow on hermit crabs. The anemones feed off of foot that the hermit crabs drop, and while anemones are made to sting like a jellyfish, the crabs don't get harmed. The anemones protect them in certain ways. There are many more factors to seashores, but these are some of the basic ones.
One theme of this book that every body should understand is that seashores are broad and very unpredictable. This is because animals in the shores are different than everyday animals we see everyday. For example, sea urchin lurk in little burrows near or on rocks. This is a type of animal that doesn't just walk on land and pass by. Seashores are also unpredictable because of plants in it. For example, anemones "wave" their stingy tentacles around. Like the sea urchins, anemones can be found near seashores, and don't pop up on shores just like that.