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Sto caricando le informazioni... Dinosaur Ladydi Linda Skeers
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. Oh. My. Gosh. Educational! Dinosaur Lady is about Mary Anning, the first paleontologist and OMG this book just screams me! Sure, I'm an adult but I still love an educational children's books full of pretty pictures! Seriously, this book got my nerd senses tingling. My positives: 1. The design of the cover is GORGEOUS. Patterns, bright colours that draw attention, bones for the title - it all just SCREAMS awesome sauce. And I haven't even opened the book yet! 2. The illustrations inside the book are even better. It's like walking into a museum but instead you're opening up a book. They are memorizing and stunning and gorgeous. So beautiful! 3. Educational terminology like ammonites and belemnites are words I haven't heard since my school days. Even the official names, petricola pholadiformis, made me get thrilled. So much smartiness in one book! And yes, I put a fake word for comedy's sake. I'm hilarious. 4. The story telling and plot is very intriguing and fun to follow. I was really interested since I didn't know Mary's story and now I want to research her! 5. Girl power! Who doesn't love a good story about a girl being totally wicked cool? 6. There are also facts at the back of this book. Who doesn't love a good appendix for learning? Especially when they include big words with definitions, timelines and more educational goodies for young learners! My negatives: 1. Mary's design doesn't perfectly match with the backgrounds, but that isn't much of a negative. It's more of an artistic pet peeve of mine. It affects the story in zero ways, but it's still something to consider. I don't think the target audience, kids, will care. Only very, very picky adults. Overall, this book is totally awesome! Whether it's for a bed time reading, general story time or for educational purposes, I would highly recommend adding this book to your shelf! I will definitely be looking for more books like this one in the near future! Five out of five stars! Thank you to NetGalley and Sourcebooks for giving me an opportunity to read this book! As the subtitle says, this book tells the story for kids of “The Daring Discoveries of Mary Anning, the First Paleontologist.” Mary Anning was born in 1799 in Lyme Regis, on the southern shores of Great Britain. Mary’s father Richard collected fossils from the cliffs at Lyme Regis to sell. That area was (and still is) known for its rich deposits from the Jurassic period. By the time she was five or six, Mary and her brother Joseph were accompanying their father on his fossil-collecting trips. Richard taught them how to look for and clean the fossils they found on the beach, and he often displayed and sold them from his shop. Richard died suddenly when Mary was 11, and Joseph had to find a career to help support the family. Mary’s mother encouraged Mary to keep finding fossils to add to their income. Joseph had previously found a fossilized skull, and when Mary was 12, she dug out its whole skeleton. The mysterious specimen was studied and debated for years. It was later named Ichthyosaurus, or 'fish lizard' - though we now know it was neither fish nor lizard, but a marine reptile. It lived 201-194 million years ago. Perhaps most remarkably, Mary discovered that the skeletons she found were full of dark, lumpy pebbles. She eventually proclaimed these these stones, known as bezoars, were, as the author writes, “actually fossilized POOP!” Mary’s discovery, Skeers notes, helped scholars learn more about what ancient creatures ate. She also researched long, thin, cone-shaped fossils that turned out to contain ink when water was added, proving “that ancient aquatic creatures squirted ink to hide themselves from hungry predators.” In 1823 when Mary was 24, she was the first to discover the complete skeleton of a plesiosaurus, a prehistoric flying reptile. Even with all of this, Mary couldn’t join the Geological Society of London, because women weren’t allowed. She couldn’t attend lectures or take university classes. But, Skeers reports, when geologists, scientists, and scholars had questions about the Earth’s past, they went to Mary’s cottage. In 1844, even King Frederick Augustus II of Saxony visited Mary in her shop! Nevertheless, the majority of Mary's finds ended up in museums and personal collections without credit being given to her as the discoverer of the fossils. Slowly, the author concludes, Mary’s achievements have been uncovered and acknowledged. The author ends with “Bone Bits and Fossil Facts” and a timeline of Mary Anning’s life. Mary died from breast cancer in 1847. She was only 47 years old, and still under financial strain. But the timeline extends to 2010, when the Royal Society of London named Marry Anning as one of the ten most influential British women of science. There is also an Author’s Note and bibliography. Illustrations by Marta Álvarez Miguéns show plenty of fossils as background in each two-page spread. Evaluation: This picture book for readers ages 6 and up conveys Mary’s dogged curiosity and determination, as well as the barriers she had to face as a female. It is bound to arouse interest in readers not only about Mary but about paleontology. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
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"As a kid, Mary Anning loved hunting for fossils with her father. One day, that hobby led to an unexpected discovery: the skeleton of a creature no one had never seen before! Mary had unearthed a dinosaur fossil, the first to ever be discovered. Her find reshaped scientific beliefs about the natural world and led to the beginning of a brand new field of study: paleontology. For the rest of her life, Mary continued to make astonishing finds and her fossils are displayed in museums all across the world! The daring discoveries of Mary Anning not only changed the scientific world, but also helped change people's attitudes towards women scientists. Dinosaur Lady is a beautiful and brilliant picture book that will enlighten children about the discovery of the dinosaurs and the importance of women scientists"-- Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)560.92Natural sciences and mathematics Fossils & prehistoric life Paleontology Biography And History BiographyClassificazione LCVotoMedia:
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Mary Anning is curious about the world around her from a young age and uses that curiosity to make ground breaking discoveries about fossils in a world that tries to ignore women in science.
This book would be useful in demonstrating the value of women in science and the importance of curiosity. ( )