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Showing 1 - 20 of 383 items
By Sue Halpern. 2001
Describes a trip into Mexico accompanying a cowboy entomologist tracking the monarch's migration. Combines scientific knowledge and research on this…
butterfly population, profiles of people who study and follow monarchs, and travel adventures.By Ewan McLeish. 1998
Explains worldwide water problems, including pollution and shortages, and suggests ways to prevent future crises. Gives advice on how individuals…
can practice conservation at home and in school. Includes a glossary and resources for further information. For grades 3-6By Julie Roberge, Aless Mc, Charles Simard. 2023
By Ursule Molinaro. 1971
By Daniel Cohen. 1971
By Tom Brown. 1989
The author contends that society and school have dulled our children's senses to the relationship between nature and life. In…
this field guide he stresses awareness, tracking, survival, and a philosophy derived from an Apache elder and "coyote teacher." Brown urges parents and teachers to value nature's ethic and teach the young the values and skills presentedBy Jeffrey Shulman. 1992
Gaylord Nelson devoted his career to speaking out about the need to preserve natural resources, the dangers of pollution, and…
the plight of endangered species. As a U.S. senator he promoted the idea of a national day to teach people about the environment--an Earth Day. The first Earth Day, April 22, 1970, may have been the largest demonstration in U.S. history. For grades 3-6 and older readersBy Samuel Young. 1991
The author, a Presbyterian missionary to the Stickeen, Alaskan Native Americans, chronicles his exploration of Glacier Bay as he accompanied…
the Scottish naturalist, John Muir. Describing journeys that the two friends made in 1879 and 1880, Young's account is part travelog, part scientific journal, and part biography of a man intoxicated by natureIncludes more than one hundred questions about wildlife and the struggles of various plants and animals to survive the pollution…
of the earth. Questions include: "Are new sorts of animals still being discovered?" "What is an ecosystem?" and "What does biodegradable mean?" For grades 5-8 and older readersBy Ken Carey. 1994
Since buying his piece of Ozark wilderness twenty years ago, writer and environmentalist Carey has learned to open his mind…
and heart to the renewing energies of spring. He describes the annual day-long trek he takes through the land. Interspersed are recollections of the almost magical happenings that led him and his family to this place and the difficult but rewarding life they have lived sinceBy Don Rittner. 1992
"EcoLinking" is Rittner's term for using computers to share ideas and research on environmental issues. Anyone interested in this multifaceted…
topic and with access to a personal computer, modem, telephone line, and communications software can use this information. Rittner describes how to get online for global networks, electronic bulletin boards, commercial online services, and library databasesBy Carol Lerner. 1992
Because they can hoard large amounts of water, cacti are called succulents. The part that holds the water is the…
green stem of the cactus. Lerner discusses some of the many types of cacti, how the cactus plant works, and where it grows. For grades 4-7By Elaine Landau. 1992
Certain species of plants become endangered because of development such as shopping malls and highways, from overcollecting by plant suppliers,…
or from overgrazing by both livestock and wild animals. The author describes at-risk plants and tells what is being done to protect them. For grades 4-7By Colin Tudge. 1996
The British science writer presents the lengthy history of human activity on the planet. He details the formation of the…
earth, the evolution of the animals, and the development of human beings. Tudge cites evolutionary advantages that have made humans uniquely destructive and proposes ways to save the earth, the remaining animals, and ourselvesBy Thomas Wiewandt. 1990
Description of how plants and animals have learned to live within the limits of the five seasons of the northern…
part of the Sonoran Desert in the American Southwest. Creosote, saguaro cactus, paloverde, and century plants provide food and shelter for rodents, insects, lizards, toads, coyotes, and bighorn sheep. For grades 4-7By Donald Schueler. 1996
In 1968, Schueler and his companion, Willie Brown, set out to homestead the "least worst land" they could find. Schueler…
recounts their twenty-five-year struggle to restore a despoiled eighty-acre tract in southern Mississippi and tells of Brown's death from AIDS in 1987By Gary Lockhart. 1988
A compendium of weather facts and fables, from ancient myths to modern research. Discusses weather cycles, phenomena, forecasting tools, and…
even Noah's ark. Tells the best time to go fishing. For junior and senior high and older readersBy Nathan Aaseng. 1994
Aaseng rejects the claim that environmentalists negatively impact the economy, yet also proposes ways to protect the Earth that would…
disrupt workers' lives least. He provides an overview of the issue from 1681 to the 1990s. For junior and senior high and older readersBy Shawna Vogel. 1995
By Jim Arnosky. 1996
The noted naturalist and artist shares his observations of tracking wildlife in and around his Vermont farm over the course…
of one winter and spring. He scrutinizes animal tracks in the snow, attends the birth of lambs, notes the feeding habits of porcupines, and observes a fox stalking a vole. For grades 5-7