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Earthquake Games: Earthquakes and Volcanoes Explained by 32 Games and Experiments
Earthquake Games Earthquakes and Volcanoes Explained by 32 Games and Experiments
Author: Matthys Levy, Mario Salvadori, Christina C. Blatt (Illustrator)
EARTHQUAKE! VOLCANO! Those two words alone put fear into many people. We expect lots of things to move, but not the earth! How could the earth, which is strong enough to support a skyscraper, shake and break up? Where do earthquakes and volcanoes come from? Are we ever going to know when and where they will hit? Could we ever learn to build stru...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780439162197
ISBN-10: 043916219X
Publication Date: 2000
Pages: 116
Rating:
  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
 1

5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Scholastic
Book Type: Unknown Binding
Other Versions: Paperback, Hardcover
Members Wishing: 1
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(Paperback)
This rich, little book merits its long title, for it carries a brief and understandable text for readers in the upper primary grades, with a set of experiments, some gamelike, along with helpful drawings for each one, and a lively list of Qs and As. It began some time back when the children of P.S. 45 in the Bronx asked, "Mario, how do earthquakes work?" The two authors tell how. They are partners, expert structural engineers whose words build an unusually good base for the varied experiments, not always easy but always fun. Their text begins with an account of the earth's drifting continents and urges a reader to use his or her hands to model the forces that, on a huge scale over a long time, raise mountain ranges, suddenly set the earth a-shake, or start awesome ocean-crossing rollers that dwarf any hurricane surge. An early experiment uses a lightly boiled egg, whose shell is no bad image for the dozen big moving pieces of the earth's broken-crust tectonic plates. The ocean waves are modeled dramatically in the bathtub: simply with your hand or, more elaborately, using a few bricks and a piece of plywood. Add a few rice grains to a pot of boiling water to simulate the enormous slow currents of hot rock that power plate motions from below. These experiments are workable for one person, better still among a few young friends with some aid from teacher or parent. Myths surrounding earthquakes are recounted from around the world, blame put on giant but unseen bulls, dragons, turtles, even catfish. Birds, fish, horses and other animals of ordinary size can perhaps sense a quake soon to come; that issue is not yet closed.


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