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Rain Forest - Amazon“. You can eat their fruit. So don’t cut them down. The trees of the field aren’t people so why should you attack them?”Deut. Since this page was so big and because it takes a while to scroll to the bottom and to download, we moved the Rain Forest Animals to a separate page. We hope these changes will make viewing easier for you. Click here to go to the Rain Forest Animals.
This page is the main Amazon Rain Forest Unit. Read this FIRST because this is a huge unit and it will save you time in navigating this page layout. The unit on this page will make AT LEAST 3 big lapbooks, but you could make more. So you need to look over everything first to decide what you want in your lapbook/notebook. The unit was designed to “mix and match” minibooks from each section.
In a nutshell: There is no “ONE” way to do this unit as you have many choices. The pictures shown in each section are only to give you an idea of where to place them.
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For example, you can take some mini books from the younger section and then some of the minibooks about the rain forest animals and create a whole different notebook or lapbook. Our pictures illustrate one lapbook for younger children, one lapbook for “just” rain forest animals and one for older ones. The minibooks for the younger lapbook were created with legal size folders in mind and the other two were created with letter size folders in mind. In a nutshell: There will be more than enough minibooks to keep you making flaps and turning flips. Be sure to look over everything first. Because the rain forest is all about the vibrant color of the rain forest, a lot of our minibooks are in color.
We just felt that we could not do justice to the beautiful creation if didn’t keep some of the color. Where possible, we added black and white. Of course, there is more than enough coloring pages as well. We linked some of the ones we felt were better. How to navigate this page? The top section or Part I of this page has facts and information on the rain forests generally and then it focuses on the Amazon Rain Forest in South America. Here are the objectives/topics we studied to help you plan: Locations of rain forest, comparison of tropical vs.
This section is mixed for various ages so you can pick and choose what works for you. Part III - This section is for the younger child. Part IV – This part is for the older child. PART I – Rain Forest & The Amazon. Exploring the Amazon Rain Forest. In 1. 91. 4, Theodore Roosevelt – who had been America’s president from 1. Amazon rain forest.
Along with Brazil’s most famous explorer, Candido Mariano da Silva Rondon, Roosevelt explored one of the most intimidatingtributaries (a river or stream that flows into a larger lake or river) of the Amazon at that time. Rondon (the man known for planting telegraph poles across his native South American country), along with Roosevelt, went on one of the most dangerous journeys that existed in their day. Despite unbelievable hardships they were able to plot one of the longest tributaries of the Amazon. The name of the expedition was called the Roosevelt- Rondon Scientific Expedition of 1.
The goal was to determine if the river flowed into the Amazon River, which it did via the Aripuana River. Sections of the river have impassable rapids and waterfalls, which hindered the expedition. Roosevelt and company not only explored the Amazon, but Roosevelt had a river named after him. The river was a 1.
River of Doubt or Rio da D. It begins in the state of Rondonia and winds for about 4. Aripuana River, which then joins the Madeira River, which joins the Amazon. They didn’t really pack many food supplies because they thought there would be plenty of wild animals to hunt. They were wrong! They found almost no large animals and the ones they found were hard to spot. However they were surrounded by millions of acres of edible plants, insects (yum yum.
The explorers ate only the tops of the palms, Brazil nuts and the few small animals they could shoot and kill. By the time they finished and reached civilization again, all of the men were sick and malnourished.(when you don’t get enough of the right food to keep you healthy and strong). You could say that almost from the start, the expedition was fraught with problems. Insects and disease such as malaria (a blood disease caused by parasites often found in jungle and rain forest environments. It is spread by mosquitoes) weighed heavily on just about every member of the expedition, leaving them in a constant state of sickness, festering wounds and high fevers. The heavy dug- out canoes were unsuitable to the constant rapids and were often lost, requiring days to build new ones. The food provisions were ill- conceived forcing the team on starvation diets.
Natives (the Cinta Larga) shadowed the expedition and were a constant source of concern – the Indians could have at any time wiped out the expedition and taken their valuable metal tools but they chose to let them pass (future expeditions in the 1. One of the camaradas murdered another, while a third was killed in a rapid. Teddy Roosevelt later wrote a book on the expedition titled Through the Brazilian Wilderness.
The story is also recounted in The River of Doubt by Candice Millard. After Roosevelt returned, some “doubted” he had actually discovered the river and made the expedition.
To settle the dispute, in 1. American explorer George Miller Dyott led a second trip down the river, confirming Roosevelt’s discoveries. Insects in the Amazon that Roosevelt could have eaten: Worms – very high in protein, just dig them up, brush them off and squeeze them to get rid of any worm poop. Raw or cooked you can eat them.
Palm grub – is considered a delicacy by the Amazonians. Grubs are soft, worm- like lava of beetles. Palm grubs can be found by putting your ear to the to the trunk of a palm tree rotting on the ground.
You can hear them moving around. They are 5 inches long, fat and white with a black head. Slit them, open the back, take off the black head and suck out the insides. Roasted over a fire they are suppose to taste like bacon.
Beetles and grasshoppers – need to be cooked if they have a hard outer shell as they often carry parasites. Find your inner EXPLORER and we hope you enjoy this unit! Tropical Rain Forest vs Temperate Rain Forest Tropical Rain Forests. Temperate Rain Forests. They grow in hot places near the equator.
They grow in cool places. Most of the animals live in the canopy layer. Most of the animals live on the forest floor. Location: They are located in a broken band around the equator called the tropics. They are found in four main regions: The three largest of these regions are Central and West Africa, including Madagascar; Central and South America; and South and Southeast Asia.
The fourth region is on the northern tip of Australia and Papua New Guinea. The largest rain forests are located in Brazil, South America, Zaire in Africa and Indonesia in Southeast Asia. They are located in more than 4. Location: They are found near large bodies of water, such as oceans and seas. They are found along coastal areas of Chili, Great Britain, Norway, Japan, New Zealand and South Australia.
The world’s largest are found along the Pacific Northwest of North America, stretching all the way from Alaska to Oregon. Seasons: They do not have a dry season.
Seasons: They have different seasons like warm summers and cool winters. Temperature: The temperatures are always warm. Average temperatures in a tropical rain forest range between 6.
Fahrenheit. 2) Rain forests are forested biomes that receive high annual rain fall due to their location. A tropical rain forest is a colorful noisy ecosystem. It includes plants, animals, soil, weather and water, it is everything). The rainforest is home to thousands of different animals, bird and plants. It has tall trees and as you can guess from the name, it gets a lot of rain. Most rain forests get more than 8. Tropical rain forests cover only about 6 or 7 percent of Earth’s surface.