Knowledge Genius PDF
Knowledge Genius PDF
GENIUS!
DK Delhi
DK London
A WORLD OF IDEAS:
SEE ALL THERE IS TO KNOW
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KNOWLEDGE
GENIUS!
Contributors: Peter Chrisp, Clive Gifford, Derek Harvey,
Andrea Mills, and John Woodward
CONTENTS
Space 10 Dinosaurs 42
Planet parade 12 Clawed carnivores 44
Space travelers 14 Plant-eating giants 46
The elements 16 Prehistoric creatures 48
Simply elementary 18 Mammals 50
The human body 20 Know your cats 52
Know your bones 22 Primate party 54
Under the microscope 24 Aquatic mammals 56
Math 26 Invertebrates 58
Shape up! 28 Insects everywhere 60
Transportation 30 Under the sea 62
On the road 32 Arachnids assemble 64
All aboard! 34 Birds 66
Taking to the skies 36 Birds of a feather 68
All at sea 38 Deadly hunters 70
Reptiles 72
Reptile room 74
Scaly serpents 76
3 GEOGRAPHY GENIUS 4 HISTORY BUFF
Index 188
Acknowledgments 192
How this 01. Choose your topic. There are five
book works
chapters on a wide range of subjects and
lots of different quizzes. Perhaps start with
one that you know all about, and then
move on to something new.
32 rays adorns
matching the picture clues with the answers. the flag of South
America’s second-
biggest country. 2 Traditional carpet weaving
mou
E
Can you identify your insects? Do you know patterns are part of this former
Soviet republic’s flag.
nation
the fe
challenge
4 This flag flies in a country that’s home
Raise
nation’s people.
Then it’s time to test yourself.
Take a look at the pictures and
Facts first
the flag
the list of answers in the panel
down the side and try to
First brush up on the basics 8 The country known for its cher
match them up. Follow these blossom season and very fast tra
with these pages of fun facts. Every nation of the world flies their own flag features a crimson sun on its flag
four steps for the best way
Filled with both essential and design. Each has been chosen to reflect the
to tackle things.
curious information, these will country’s history, colors, and identity. They
represent the pride of the people, uniting
warm up your brain for the
everyone under one big banner.
quizzes that follow. Red symbolizes
“brightness”
paradise stars on
l’s
hangs from.
flag on the Moon the law to damage or destroy this A
fag
Fly bought for just $5.50. It was placed inside an to six months in prison, while
Vexillology is the name given to
The part of aluminum tube and flown to the Moon the study of flags. It comes from in Israel the punishment can
by a 15-year-old
ur s
the flag the latin word vexillum, meaning be up to three years in prison.
on board the Apollo 11 spacecraft in 1969.
on
farthest from
“flag.” Vexillologists even have schoolgirl in 1971.
fo
the staff.
ly
ti
na
with a national flag that does not Finland is washed, it can only
feature the colors red, white, or blue. be dried indoors.
Flags come in a great variety of colors, patterns, and 12 The eagle sitting on a cactus is based
designs, but they all share the same features and parts. Some countries have rules
The latest design of the US
on historic symbols
time of theof
daythe Aztec empire.
02.
Flags
flag was adopted in 1960 and was about what
Find a
good new spot. Six created by 17-year-old Robert G. Heft their flag can be flown. In Iceland,
Apollo missions have as a school assignment. He only earned for instance, the flag must never
planted flags on the a B- grade in class! be raised before seven o’clock in
Moon, and they are the morning.
all still there today. At the 1936 Olympics, Haiti and
Liechtenstein discovered their national
Flags developed out of the coat of arms flags were the same. Liechtenstein
that armies carried into battle. Some 03. Try to plant later added a crown to their flag. 13 This country is famed for its
countries have used the same flag design the flag pole into the
for centuries while others have changed
lunar surface—this is All official national flags in India African wildlife and its Maasai peoples
not easy, the ground are made in one factory in Bengeri
their look. Afghanistan, for instance, has is very hard. village, in the state of Karnataka. whose shield is found on the flag.
had more than 20 different flags in the
past 150 years!
01. 04.
I don’t
There’s no Check the
wind on the Moon to pole really is firm—
fly a flag. Get engineers in 1969, when the
believe it to place a wire into a
hem sewn into the top
spacecraft left, the
blast of the engines
The 27 stars on Brazil’s flag show the of the flag so it will stick knocked the flag over!
22,152 sq ft pattern in the night sky above the city out straight.
In numbers
131
16 Formed by
STARTER
quare flag.
which Nelson Mandela became its president. South Africa
17 All the official
China Start off easy ...
flags of this nation
are made of khadi—
Brazil These answers
a cloth popularized by France should be the
Greece
Mahatma Gandhi. easiest to figure out.
Australia
Argentina
Russian Federation
CHALLENGER
Nigeria
7 This island kingdom’s flag Turkey Getting harder ...
was formed by combining
three flags into one. 18 The flag of the world’s
Mexico How about these
biggest country and hosts
19 This country, which India harder answers?
the Amazon river flows Germany
of the 2018 FIFA World Cup.
through, has the words Italy
Can you match
“Order and Progress” them, too?
on its flag.
Liberia
rry Kenya
ains Bhutan
g. Turkmenistan
GENIUS! South Korea Truly tricky
Papua New Guinea If you can figure out
Saudi Arabia these final answers
22 The world’s best-known long- Swaziland it’s official—you’re
distance cycling race has been Peru
21The circular symbol at the
hosted by this nation since 1903. a genius!!
center of this Asian nation’s flag
means balance in the universe.
No peeking!
You’ll find the answers
matched with the
04. Work your way through the three
levels of difficulty—it’s not supposed to
05. There is also a picture quiz for
every chapter, from spotting an insect to
number of the correct be easy! When you think you have got finding your way through a maze. Check
picture, at the bottom them all, check the answers—they’re you’ve got it right in the Answers section
of the page.
upside-down at the bottom of the page. at the back of the book.
SCIENCE
GEEK
1
Star hunter
Studying the night sky has helped scientists
discover many wonders in our universe.
Can you find the constellation of Orion the
hunter in this starry scene? Start by looking
for three bright stars in a line that make up
his belt. Nearby, more stars form his body.
Th
What is a comet?
e
Gas tail: The gas from su
the comet that stretches These dirty snowballs, made of ice and dust, n
out a long way behind travel around the sun in oval orbits. When they is
the nucleus, pointing so
almost directly away pass close to the sun, the ice heats up forming bi
from the sun. long tails of dust and gas. gt
ha
t1
.3 m
Coma: A cloud of illio
gas and dust that
n Ea
surrounds the nucleus,
rths
could f
when the comet heats up. t inside it.
Solar System
Delta IV Heavy: This
powerful American The solar system formed around 4.6 billion
Galaxies galore launch vehicle is
236 ft (72 m) tall. years ago from a ball of gas and dust. At its
center lies a star called the sun. Eight planets
orbit the sun along oval-shaped paths.
Elliptical galaxy
Shaped like a ball
or an egg, elliptical
galaxies, such as
Fornax, have little
gas or dust.
Spiral galaxy
A galaxy shaped like a giant
disk with a round center
and long, curving arms is
known as a spiral galaxy.
The arms of NGC 1566,
for example, are full of
dust and young stars.
Lenticular galaxy How to get to the sun
Some galaxies, such
as NGC 5010, have
no curved arms,
just a bulge in the 01. Construct a suitable spacecraft, like the
middle, which Parker Solar Probe that launched in 2018 and is
makes them look expected to fly through the sun’s atmosphere, and
like a glass lens. make its closest approach to the Sun in 2025.
Irregular galaxy 02. Make sure there are two parts to your
These are galaxies spacecraft—a probe, to be sent to the sun, and a
with no obvious giant launch vehicle, like the Delta IV Heavy shown
shape. They may here, to get the probe into space.
have been pulled
out of shape by a
close encounter with
another galaxy. Seen
here is Barnard’s Galaxy. 03. During the launch, the
booster rockets will use their fuel
and fall away, leaving the probe to
travel toward the sun.
In numbers
travels in a single second—a unit known help the probe reach speeds
Exoplanet facts
1 The smallest of 2 A stormy world, the 3 The third planet 4 This object 5 Also known as the 6 The solar system’s
the planets, and the surface temperature on from the sun, this was visited by 12 red planet because largest planet is so
closest one to the this planet can rocket is the only place astronauts in Apollo of its rusty, iron rocks, big more than 1,300
sun, this rocky world to a blistering 867ºF in the universe spacecraft between more spacecraft have Earths could fit inside.
shares its name with (464ºC) which is hot where life is 1969 and 1972. been sent to this It is orbited by almost
a chemical element. enough to melt lead. known to exist. world than any other. 70 moons.
13
TEST YOURSELF
Earth
Mars
STARTER
Moon
Jupiter
The surface temperature
of the sun is 9,930°F
(5,500°C).
Saturn
CHALLENGER
This gas giant is the
least dense planet in
Venus
the solar system—it is Mercury
lighter than water. Neptune
Titan
Uranus
GENIUS!
Io
Ganymede
7 The largest moon in the solar system, 9 Spectacular 10 Second 11 This giant ball of 12 The farthest
it is 3,270 miles (5,262 km) across. rings of dust, largest in the solar gas with an icy core planet from the sun,
rock, and ice system, this moon takes 84 Earth years it was named after a
8 Discovered by the Italian astronomer encircle this is bigger than the to orbit the sun. god of the sea for its
Galileo in 1610, this yellow moon is gas giant. planet Mercury. deep-blue color.
home to more than 400 active volcanoes.
2 This 1972
American space
probe was the first
to travel past Mars
and through the
Asteroid Belt to take
photos of Jupiter.
Space
surface of Mars since 2012. It
carries 17 cameras and a host
A laser in the head turns of scientific instruments.
rocks into dust and gas, to
reveal the rocks’ composition.
travelers
The development of powerful rocket engines
in the 1950s enabled spacecraft and, later,
people to explore space. The voyages made by
these remarkable spacecraft—both manned Cone-shaped
and unmanned—have taught us much Command
Module held
about the universe. three astronauts
5 The world’s
biggest and most
powerful launch vehicle
was made up of three
rockets, or “stages.” It launched
missions carrying astronauts to the
Moon between 1969 and 1972.
8. Space Shuttle 9. Apollo 11 Lunar Module 10. Voyager 1 11. International Space Station 12. Long March 3A
ANSWERS: 1. Mariner 10 2. Pioneer 10 3. Sputnik 1 4. Curiosity 5. Saturn V 6. Yutu 7. Cassini–Huygens
15
STARTER
planes. The last of these Sputnik 1
spacecraft retired in 2011.
Saturn V
CHALLENGER
parachuted down onto Saturn’s (3.7 m) across
Apollo 11
largest moon, Titan. Lunar Module
Curiosity
Yutu
Cassini–Huygens
GENIUS!
Long March 3A
Mariner 10
Smaller modules
are built on
Earth and joined
11 The largest human-made object together in space.
in space, at 357 ft (109 m) across, this 12 This 170-ft- (52-m-) tall
machine is home to up to six Chinese rocket was built
astronauts, who live and conduct to launch communication
experiments on board. satellites. It also launched
China’s first mission
to the Moon in 2007.
16 SCIENCE GEEK
The elements
Chemical symbol
A unique one- or
two-letter code
for the element.
2
Everything around us is made up of simple
substances called elements. Each one is made He
Helium
up of tiny particles called atoms, which are 4
S Ba
Name
Every element
elements combine, they form a compound. has a full name. Sulfur Bariu
For example, sodium and chlorine combine 32.06 137.3
m
2
to form sodium chloride, or common salt. 23
V Ar
18
Na
11
34
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Na Mg Al Si P S Cl Ar Key
19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 Hydrogen
K Ca Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn Ga Ge As Se Br Kr
Alkali Metals
37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 Alkaline Earth Metals
Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Mo Tc Ru Rh Pd Ag Cd In Sn Sb Te I Xe
Transition Metals
55 56 57–71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86
Lanthanides
Cs Ba La-Lu Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi Po At Rn
Actinides
87 88 89–103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118
The Boron Group
Fr Ra Ac-Lr Rf Db Sg Bh Hs Mt Ds Rg Cn Nh Fl Mc Lv Ts Og
The Carbon Group
57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 The Nitrogen Group
La Ce Pr Nd Pm Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb Lu
The Oxygen Group
89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103
The Halogen Group
Ac Th Pa U Np Pu Am Cm Bk Cf Es Fm Md No Lr
Noble Gases
Since the 1700s, scientists have been
discovering new elements.
Cronstedt discovers Scottish chemist Daniel Davy discovers potassium, Jöns Jacob Berzelius discovered by the
nickel while working Rutherford identifies sodium (above), calcium, discovers silicon while British chemists Sir
as a Swedish nitrogen gas. strontium, barium, experimenting in William Ramsay and
mining expert. and magnesium. his laboratory. Morris William Travers.
Stuffed crust
Others 1.5%
Magnesium 2.1%
Potassium 2.6%
Sodium 2.8%
Natural elements are found in
Calcium 3.6%
the minerals and rocks that
Iron 5%
form Earth’s outer layer—its
crust. Only a few are found
Aluminum
Oxygen
in pure form—most of
8.1% them combine with others
46.6%
to form compounds.
Silicon
27.7%
100,000,000
In numbers
Proton:
The approximate number of Particle
atoms that can fit in a row with a
measuring 1⁄2 in (1 cm). Electron:
positive
charge.
Particle with
9,000 a negative
charge.
Neutron: Particle
with no charge.
The approximate number of
graphite pencils that could be
made from all the carbon found Inside an atom
in a human body. There are three types of tiny particles in
an atom. Neutrons and protons form
6,177°F the central nucleus, around which
electrons are arranged in layers
(3,414°C) The temperature at called shells.
which tungsten melts—the
highest melting point of any
naturally occurring element.
91
The percentage of the sun made I don’t
It’s chemical!
Fireworks get their
up of one element—hydrogen.
believe it colors from different
elements. Red sparks come
4 A piece of gold the size from lithium and strontium.
The number of elements that of a grain of rice can be
make up 96 percent of the hammered into a thin layer A lump of the element
human body. Those are oxygen, covering 1,550 sq in gallium melts just by
carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen. (10,000 sq cm).
clasping it in a hand.
Platinum is highly
ductile, which means
it can be drawn into really
thin wires—as thin as
0.00006 mm.
1898 1940 2016
French chemists Plutonium is discovered by Four elements are Only two elements
Marie and Pierre Curie Glenn Seaborg and his team officially named, including
discover two new in the US. It is radioactive Oganesson after one naturally exist in a
elements—radium and used for nuclear power of the discoverers liquid state—mercury
and polonium. and weapons. Yuri Oganessian (above). and bromine.
18 SCIENCE GEEK
Simply
elementary This element is highly
flammable and is used
on the strips on the side
of safety match boxes.
1 In 1669, a German
alchemist accidentally
discovered this element when
he was boiling a large pot of
his urine in search of the
Most of the 118 elements that make up the universe mythical Philosopher’s Stone.
are solids, but 11 are gases at room temperature, and
two are liquids. Here are 18 elements for you to name.
Alongside each picture, look out for the unique chemical P
symbol—one or two letters—that scientists across the
world use to identify each element.
2 Named after the
Greek word for violet,
this element does not
The glass sphere
traps the purple- melt upon heating—it
black vapor. turns directly into
When cooled to vapor. It is used
−297°F (−183°C) this
colorless gas becomes to make antiseptics
a clear, blue liquid. and in food dyes.
4 This shiny
3 Life on Earth depends on precious metal is a
this element for survival. All popular choice for
living things need to breathe making jewelry. It also Pure form of
in this gas to convert food conducts electricity well the element
tarnishes when
into energy. and is used in electronics. exposed to air.
O Ag
Cl Mg
10. Bismuth 11. Gold 12. Krypton 13. Copper 14. Hydrogen 15. Osmium 16. Sulfur 17. Carbon 18. Mercury
ANSWERS: 1. Phosphorus 2. Iodine 3. Oxygen 4. Silver 5. Aluminum 6. Chlorine 7. Magnesium 8. Neon 9. Iron
19
Ne Fe Bi
Au Kr Cu Unique reddish-
orange color
A blue-
11 For thousands of years, white glow
13 Soft and flexible
this easy-to-work precious is produced in its pure form, this
metal has been used to when this metal conducts
make jewelry. It was also colorless gas heat and electricity
forged into coins in the past. is electrified. extremely well. For
this reason it is used
to make electrical
wires and saucepans.
12 One of the rarest gases
fuel by stars to of all naturally occurring is found near volcanoes. exists in many forms: as a
generate heat elements and has a very high Many compounds containing black, crumbly solid called
and light. melting point at 5,491°F this element give off a foul graphite, as well as one of
(3,033°C). rotten-egg smell. the hardest substances on
Pure gas glows purple Earth—diamond.
when electrified
H C
Crystals of this element
are often found attached
to volcanic mud.
18 Known as
quicksilver in
the past, this TEST YOURSELF
metal is quite
poisonous, but is STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
still found in some
thermometers. Gold Aluminum Krypton
Silver Oxygen Osmium
This is the only Copper Neon Chlorine
Hg metal that is liquid
at room temperature.
Iron
Carbon
Magnesium
Mercury
Phosphorus
Bismuth
Sulfur Hydrogen Iodine
20 SCIENCE GEEK
The human
body Building a body 250,000
In numbers
The number of new
Cells: These are the
brain cells a developing
smallest building
blocks of the human baby typically grows
The human body is a miracle of body and come in lots every minute.
of different types.
nature. It is packed full of parts—
25,000
from 206 bones and 21 sq ft The typical number
of breaths you take
(2 sq m) of skin, to hundreds every day.
Tissue: Cells of the
of thousands of hairs and billions same type group
Organ: A group
65
Body systems of different tissues The percentage of your
make up an organ, body made of oxygen.
such as the heart (left).
Organs that are linked together are called
systems. Here are four body systems.
This muscle
Tendon helps your Nerves carry
connects hand grip. signals to and
muscles to from the brain.
bones.
Arteries carry
Ulna bone Veins carry blood from your
runs from blood back heart to parts of
elbow to wrist. to your heart. the body.
21
Looking inside
Anatomy facts
In around 200 ce, Greek
Twisting frame
of DNA forms scientist Galen of Pergamon
the shape of a described how the heart
double helix
X-ray: X-rays are high pumped blood around the body.
energy waves that can
pass through soft tissue
British scientist William
in your body to reveal
hard material such as Harvey accurately described
teeth, joints, and bones. how blood circulated around the
body 1,400 years after Galen.
Soldier cell
This hungry hunter is a white blood
cell, which seeks out germs and
How do senses work?
infected cells and gobbles
them up to prevent
infections.
Sight: Your brain puts the different
views of your eyes together to
give a 3-D view of the world.
Touch: Touch
Hearing:
I don’t believe it
receptor cells in
your skin tell you Sound
what objects travels through
You shed around 10 billion dead feel like. the ears as
skin cells from your body every day. vibrations.
22 SCIENCE GEEK
bones
fingers and thumbs. You
have similar ones with the
same name in your feet!
13. Radius 14. Skull 15. Ulna 16. Mandible 17. Clavicle 18. Scapula 19. Ribs 20. Humerus 21. Sternum 22. Vertebrae 23. Sacrum 24. Pelvis
ANSWERS: 1. Phalanges 2. Metacarpals 3. Carpals 4. Fibula 5. Femur 6. Tibia 7. Patella 8. Tarsals 9. Metatarsals 10. Stirrup 11. Anvil 12. Hammer
23
TEST YOURSELF
STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
This open
framework keeps
things light and
actually increases
its strength!
1 This
may look
like delicate
lace—but it’s
strong enough 2 A human can
to help you stand have around 100,000 of
up straight. these stalks just sprouting
from their head.
TEST YOURSELF
STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
there’s a creepy
crawly about,
but at 1⁄100 in
(0.4 mm) long,
you won’t see it,
however hard
Take a really close-up look at yourself! These jaw- you look!
dropping images, magnified many times through a
powerful microscope, reveal the human body—and
some of the things that live with us—in incredible
detail. Can you recognize which bit of you is which?
Individual
bundles
of tissue
8 You need the
hardest substance
in the body for all
that chomping!
9 Ready to run?
These tightly
packed bundles of
tissues will get you
on the move.
Sweat
droplets
10 Stay cool! Salty water
runs through this tiny
tunnel, making it
12 Every day, we
part of the body’s
temperature produce hundreds
control system. of billions of these.
Above you can see
two types—the red
ones transport
11 Allow yourself
oxygen around the
a big smile if you body, and the white
recognize this stretchy ones fight germs.
stuff. It is usually red in
color due to the blood vessels
underneath the thin skin.
9. Muscle fibers 10. Sweat pore 11. Lip skin 12. Blood cells
ANSWERS: 1. Bone tissue 2. Hair 3. Head louse 4. Skin 5. Fingerprint 6. Intestinal lining 7. Eyelash mite 8. Tooth enamel
26 SCIENCE GEEK
Math
Math is the study of numbers and how they
relate to each other and the world. We need
math for many things—for science, for
building everything from houses to bridges, Perfectly packed
and for powering the computers and Bees make their
honeycomb out of
smartphones we use in our hexagons (six-sided
shapes) because they
everyday lives. fit together perfectly.
Petal pattern
I don’t believe it Next time you see a flower, count
the number of petals it has—it is
Although equations existed in ancient times, often a Fibonacci number.
Using your fingers
is also a handy way the equals sign was only invented in 1557,
to communicate by Welsh mathematician Robert Recorde.
numbers without
using words.
Counting
in tens
The first people to
count almost certainly
used their hands and
Nature’s numbers
Modern
1 2 3 4 5 6 Hindu-Arabic
Mayan
Ancient Chinese
Pythagoras: An ancient Archimedes: This Greek
Ancient Roman Greek mathematician, he thinker found ways to
is best known for figuring calculate the area of circles
Ancient Egyptian out the relationship and other shapes as well
between the sides and as using math to create
Babylonian angles of a triangle. many inventions.
27
Natural symmetry
If an object has two halves
that look like reflections, we
Measuring Earth
say it has lateral symmetry. Greek scientist Eratosthenes was one of the
Most animals have lateral first people to use math to measure Earth’s size,
symmetry, including you!
around 2,200 years ago. He did this using the
A snowflake has
lots of lines angles cast by shadows at two different places
of symmetry. in Egypt. He got the answer 25,000 miles
You have only (40,000 km)—almost exactly right!
one—down
the middle.
The distance
around Earth
is called its
circumference.
Infinity
Naming numbers
This is the word used by
mathematicians to define
an endless amount. The
symbol for infinity is an eight
on its side: ∞ .
Zero
Number systems had no
number for nothing until
Indian mathematicians
invented it around 650 ce.
Super spiral
This plant is made up
Googol
The name of the number 1
of five spirals—another
Fibonacci number!
followed by 100 zeros. It
Look for spirals was named by a 9-year-old
on pine cones and US schoolboy in 1920.
pineapples, too.
ic
Math mieandgwith your mind-reading mat
h.
Impress a fr
fold it, and
o n a pie ce of paper,
e numbe r 9 ok at it.
1. Write th te ll in g th em not to lo
our frien d
give it to y
them to:
lc u la tor and ask se
r friend a ca f their hou
2. Give you n d a d d th e number o e r
ir age a eir phone n
umb
• Put in the r digits of th
la st fo u
• Add the 18 er
e result by r. If the answ
Hypatia: The first known Al-Khwarizmi: Born • Multiply th th e a n sw er togethe s unti l
igits of e digit
female mathematician, in 780 CE, this Arabic • Add the d e d ig it , ke ep adding th
an on
Hypatia lived in Egypt mathematician described has more th
more than 2,300 years equations and algebra and ly h av e one left.
they on f paper and
ago and had her own introduced Hindu-Arabic
o k at the piece o
friend to lo always 9.
3. Tell your e answer is
school of math. numbers (1–9) to Europe.
m e n t. T h
amaze
watch their
28 SCIENCE GEEK
Shape up!
There are three
sloping faces.
The diagonals of
this shape intersect
at 90°.
Each angle
on this shape
measures 120°.
TEST YOURSELF
21 With a circular
base, this shape STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
narrows to a point
at its other end— Square Hexagon Nonagon
turn it upside down Rectangle Heptagon Decagon
and you could fill
Sphere Octagon Rhombus
it with ice cream.
Cube Pentagon Parallelogram
Cylinder Kite Trapezium
Cone Cuboid Square-based
Equilateral triangle Triangular prism pyramid
Hexagonal prism
30 SCIENCE GEEK
Transportation
Before planes, trains, and cars, long journeys could
How to fly
take months. People walked, rode, used horse-drawn a plane
carriages, or sailed with the wind. Now we fly around
the world in hours, cross oceans in high-tech liners,
and speed overland in all types of vehicles. 01. Start the engine
and release the brakes. The
engine produces
Steaming ahead thrust—a force
that pushes the
Invented over 200 years ago, the steam train would revolutionize travel, plane forward.
connecting cities and countries like never before. Steam trains burn wood or
coal to heat water, which turns into steam. The steam pushes rods that turn
wheels around, propelling the train and the carriages it pulls along the track.
In numbers
this outlet. turning into steam. furnace going)
stand here. The number of parts used to
build a Boeing 747 jet airliner.
1,505 ft
(458.45 m) The length of
the world’s longest ship, the
Seawise Giant supertanker.
36
The number of wheels on the
world’s longest stretch limo,
which is 100 ft (30.5 m) long
and contains a swimming
pool and a double bed.
Vestas Sailrocket 2: The world’s Westland Lynx AH.1: Spirit of Australia: In SR-71 Blackbird: This military
fastest sailing ship travels at Reaching 249.09 mph 1978, this boat set the jet plane can fly at high levels,
75.22 mph (121.06 km/h). (400.87 km/h), this is the fastest water speed record of at speeds of 2,193.1 mph
helicopter ever made to date. 317.59 mph (511.11 km/h). (3,529.56 km/h).
A4 Mallard: The fastest-ever Bugatti Veyron 16.4 Super SCMaglev L0 train: In Thrust SSC: The world land
steam locomotive reached Sport: This supercar has a 2015, this experimental train speed record holder achieved
126 mph (203 km/h) in 1936. top speed of 267.86 mph reached 375 mph (603 km/h). 763 mph (1,227.9 km/h) in 1997.
(431.07 km/h).
31
The
Seabreacher,
a two-person
underwater
craft, can leap
out of the water
like a dolphin.
Get moving!
At only 41⁄2 ft (1.37 m)
long, the Peel P50 is the
smallest drivable car in the world.
On the road
the first car made by a
famous Japanese car
company. Its engine is
in the back, with room
for storage in the front.
Wooden
spokes
TEST YOURSELF
6 Known for its
Volkswagen Beetle
rocket-shaped tail fins, this
Mini Cooper
iconic 1950s American
STARTER
Subaru 360
car was first launched in 1959.
Benz Patent-
Motorwagen Its design was later improved
by a Formula 1 car designer.
Tesla Roadster
No doors—making
it easy for people
to hop in and out
9. DeLorean DMC-12 10. Aston Martin DB2/4 11. Ford GT40 12. Rolls Royce Phantom 13. Volkswagen Beetle 14. Bugatti Veyron 15. Benz Patent-Motorwagen
ANSWERS: 1. Stretch limousine 2. Subaru 360 3. Ford Model T 4. Tesla Roadster 5. Smart Car 6. Cadillac Eldorado 7. Willys Jeep 8. Mini Cooper
33
Gull-wing doors
10 This 1950s British sports car
9 Famous for featuring in is known for its speed, and the
open upward
the 1980s Back To The manufacturer is James Bond’s
Future movie series, car producer of choice!
this unusual car
had a stainless
steel body.
Figurehead is
called the “Spirit
of Ecstasy”
12 The manufacturer
of this luxury car
with a ghostly name
is known for its
quality production.
Distinctive bug-
Folding roof shaped body
for rainy days
The coaches
provide the look
and feel of
royal rail cars.
8. The Flying Scotsman 9. The Fairy Queen 10. H-Bahn Sky-Train 11. GM Aerotrain 12. Osaka monorail 13. A4 Mallard 14. The Ghan 15. Stephenson’s Rocket
ANSWERS: 1. Train à Grande Vitesse (TGV) 2. Budd Metroliner 3. Shanghai Maglev 4. Palace on Wheels 5. Rocky Mountaineer 6. JRN Shinkansen bullet train 7. London Underground
35
10 This
9 Built in 1855, this East Indian Railways driverless train hangs below
train is the oldest steam locomotive still its rail, carrying passengers around
running full-steam ahead. Germany’s Düsseldorf airport.
TEST YOURSELF
STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
These propellers
tilt upward to help
the plane take
off vertically. 1 The first
powered, heavier-
than-air plane was
built and flown
by two brothers
Pilot lay
in 1903. across
the wing.
Taking to
but is now used for search-
and-rescue missions.
the skies
The windshield is made
of armored glass.
TEST YOURSELF
Bell 47
Concorde
STARTER
Hindenburg
7 The world’s Wright Flyer
biggest airliner,
6 In the 1930s, this German this plane can hold
airship carried 97 passengers up to 853 passengers.
in style across the Atlantic
Ocean. At 804 ft (245 m) it
was longer than eight and a Lockheed SR71
Blackbird
CHALLENGER
half NBA basketball courts.
The plane’s nose Airbus A380
could droop down de Havilland Canada
when landing to DHC-3 Otter
give the pilots a Fokker Dr.1
better view.
Control cabin
for crew
8 Until its retirement in
GENIUS!
SpaceShipTwo
1,350 mph (2,180 km/h). Supermarine
Spitfire
9 Passengers may
This aircraft
launches the jet one day fly in space in
plane (center). future models of this
experimental aircraft.
Fish-bowl style
canopy for all-
around vision
this spy plane is the fastest jet aircraft ever— this craft was the first to fly
it flew 3,460 miles (5,566 km) from New York, US, over the Alps mountain
to London, UK, in under 1 hour and 55 minutes. range in Europe in 1950.
6. Hindenburg 7. Airbus A380 8. Concorde 9. SpaceShipTwo 10. Fokker Dr.1 11. Lockheed SR71 Blackbird 12. Bell 47
ANSWERS: 1. Wright Flyer 2. Boeing V-22 Osprey 3. de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Otter 4. Westland Sea King 5. Supermarine Spitfire
38 SCIENCE GEEK
All at sea
1 Shops, restaurants, and
even swimming pools can
be found in this
floating hotel.
Ram was
3 Small, rapid military boats
used to
smash into carry cannons or other weapons
enemy ships. for patrolling coastal waters.
9. River steamboat 10. Viking longship 11. Merchant junk 12. Sampan 13. Aircraft carrier 14. Car ferry 15. Icebreaker
ANSWERS: 1. Cruise liner 2. Trireme 3. Gunboat 4. Dhow 5. Gas tanker 6. Galleon 7. Container ship 8. Battleship
39
STARTER
explorers from Scandinavia Container ship
sailed this shallow- Viking longship
bodied boat using Cruise liner
Paddle wheels woollen cloth sails.
11 A historic Chinese trading
CHALLENGER
Gas tanker
Battleship
Car ferry
Bamboo Icebreaker
canes
stiffen
12A traditional, flat-bottomed
the sail. wooden boat, this vessel is
used in China and some parts
Gunboat
of Southeast Asia.
Galleon
GENIUS!
Canopy Trireme
for shelter
Merchant junk
13 This giant military ship acts
Sampan
as a floating airfield for military
planes and helicopters.
Hull is reinforced
to force its way
through the ice
KNOW-IT-ALL
NATURE
2
Camouflage challenge
The world’s plants come in a variety
of extraordinary colors and patterns.
But there is more than just foliage in this
picture—these leaves are the perfect hiding
place for the imperial moth. Can you see
past its clever camouflage and spot it?
42 NATURE KNOW-IT-ALL
01. To become a fossil, 02. Once the soft parts 03. Over millions of years, 04. Over millions more
a dinosaur body needs rot away, the hard bones minerals fill spaces in the years, wind and rain
to be quickly buried; for end up under deeper bones, which turn the wear the rocks away,
example, by being covered layers of sediment. sediment into rock and exposing the fossil so
by volcanic ash. bones into fossils. it can be found.
longest specimen o
The f Ty
x m easures 39 ft (1 ran
re 2 m) nos
lon aur
g. us
The age, in years, of the fossils of Some dinosaur fossils, such as this
Nyasasaurus, the oldest dinosaur. Archaeopteryx specimen (right),
show the impressions of feathers—
2 ft
(60 cm) The length of the biggest T. rex walked with its
fossilized dinosaur eggs. body roughly parallel
to the ground.
Holes for
large nostrils
for sniffing
out prey.
I don’t believe it
The longest and heaviest dinosaur discovered
to date is Argentinosaurus. It was the length of
four fire engines and would have weighed as
much as 17 African elephants!
Fossil finds
dinosaur might have looked. Dinosaur fossils have been
found on every continent,
including Antarctica.
Clawed
1 This creature had
feathery, clawed wings
that enabled it to fly for
carnivores
short bursts—but it also had
a toothy dino-like jaw!
4 Found in
Asia, this large
species had a
bumpy crest along the
middle of its snout.
Three strong
toes, each with
a blunt claw
9 Measuring 46 ft
(14 m) long, the biggest TEST YOURSELF
The spiny “sail”
meat-eating dinosaur had was supported
a giant “sail” on its back by bones as long Spinosaurus
and crocodile-like jaws as 6 ft (1.8 m). Archaeopteryx
STARTER
for catching fish.
Tyrannosaurus
Velociraptor
Gallimimus
CHALLENGER
Allosaurus
Coelophysis
Cryolophosaurus
Dilophosaurus
Monolophosaurus
GENIUS!
Baryonyx
Ceratosaurus
10 This Jurassic
dinosaur had
more than 70
knife-like teeth,
11 Unusual perfect for
skull crests eating big
set this dinosaur plant-eating
apart from other Three- dinosaurs.
clawed Powerful
meat-eaters. hand legs for
chasing prey
Powerful, three-
clawed hand
Plant-eating
giants
1 The extraordinary
neck—that grew up to 39 ft
(12 m) long—of this Chinese
giant made up almost half
of its total length.
Bony spikes
covered the
head and snout.
3 A strong 10-in-
(25.4-cm-) thick skull—
thicker than any
2 This North other dinosaur
American plant- skull—may have
eater had a narrow, been used for head-
sharp beak, which it butting contests.
used to rip leaves
from plants.
Heavy tail
helped to
balance the
long neck.
4 The unusual,
STARTER
5 One of the longest land Triceratops
Flat, bony Stegosaurus
animals ever, at 108 ft (33 m), this
plates were
dinosaur could gather leaves from as long as
the top of tall trees. Its vast body 2 ft (60 cm).
contained a huge digestive
system to process the
tough plant food. Iguanodon
CHALLENGER
Brachiosaurus
Corythosaurus
Parasaurolophus
GENIUS!
staying in the nest for several weeks. 8 The big, Scelidosaurus
distinctive plates Pachycephalosaurus
on this dinosaur’s
back were possibly
used for show.
Bony plates
protected by an armored
Club-like lump back and a tail club that
of bone could be swung at its foe.
6. Brachiosaurus 7. Maiasaura 8. Stegosaurus 9. Iguanodon 10. Scelidosaurus 11. Triceratops 12. Ankylosaurus
ANSWERS: 1. Mamenchisaurus 2. Corythosaurus 3. Pachycephalosaurus 4. Parasaurolophus 5. Diplodocus
48 NATURE KNOW-IT-ALL
creatures
ice and snow.
1 The shaggy
coat of this elephant
cousin was necessary
to survive the bitterly
After the age of the dinosaurs, some cold Ice Age. It measured
extraordinary animals walked the Earth. 111⁄10 ft (3.4 m) at
the shoulder.
Some grew into giant beasts, while others
remained as small as rats. Though they may
look similar to some modern-day animals, A thick layer of
the creatures shown here—many with truly fat helped to
keep it warm.
tricky names—are now all extinct.
Hair could
grow up to 3 ft
3 Unlike its slow-moving (90 cm) long.
modern-day relatives, this
giant beast, at 20 ft (6 m),
was too heavy to climb
trees and lived on the
ground—but used
its large claws to
pull branches
within reach.
STARTER
over four long Woolly rhinoceros
finger bones
6 About the size of a white rhinoceros, Giant ground sloth
which can weigh up to 2.5 tons, this Ice The front horn
Age grazer used its large molars to was flat rather
grind tough vegetation. than conical.
Uintatherium
CHALLENGER
Glyptodon
Gastornis
Procoptodon
Icaronycteris
GENIUS!
Andrewsarchus
Macrauchenia
7 This strange-looking
mammal roamed the
grasslands of South America,
8 Flightless, like the
feeding on leaves and grass.
modern-day ostrich, this Hooked
beak
big bird had a long neck
and large beak,
possibly for 10 This mammal had
cracking nuts. strange one-toed feet
that looked like a single,
large claw. It could be
10 ft (3 m) tall.
9 The long, curved,
The upper
canines
could grow
up to 7 in
(18 cm) long.
Like kangaroos,
mothers carried the
11 Weighing as much as a small baby in a pouch.
car, this armadillo-like herbivore
had tough armor made up of
hundreds of bony plates.
Mammals
Small ears keep heat
loss to a minimum.
How to survive
in the Arctic
Flapping
about!
A few kinds of tree-living mammals—
such as squirrels—can glide through
the air, but bats are the only mammals
that can truly fly. Their wings are made
up of skin stretched over very long Thin wings
help bats
t to pump bl
40 the smallest mammal by
weight, averaging just
The percentage of
mammal species that 0.06 oz (1.8 g). The
are rodents. Hairless wonders! bumblebee bat has a
Many ocean mammals, such as smaller body length, but
2 dolphins, don’t have hairy skin. weighs more.
hear
I don’t believe it
s an e
A gi
1 The tail of
this solitary
Know
American cat
is nearly as 2 The fastest animal
long as the on legs would easily
rest of its body! beat the speediest human
your cats
sprinter—it can reach speeds
of 70 mph (115 km/h).
5 The biggest of
all cats, weighing up
to 800 lb (363 kg),
has giant paws
for swiping prey.
Distinctive rosette-
patterned fur
6 A tropical cat
from the Americas,
this hunter is the
emblem of a
famous luxury car.
53
STARTER
Lion
Tiger
Long, pointed
Puma
CHALLENGER
ears help hearing.
Snow Leopard
Ocelot
Leopard
GENIUS!
Pallas’s cat
10 At up to 31⁄2 ft (1.1 m)
Eurasian lynx
this cat may be small, but
The mane
makes the
it has the strength to kill
male look reindeer and wild boar.
bigger than it
really is. 11 The distinctive patterned coat
that gives this cat its name
is a good camouflage
when hunting in
the forests of
Southeast Asia.
8. Ocelot 9. Snow Leopard 10. Eurasian lynx 11. Marbled cat 12. Lion
ANSWERS: 1. Puma 2. Cheetah 3. Leopard 4. Caracal 5. Tiger 6. Jaguar 7. Pallas’s cat
54
1 After
gnawing
through tree bark,
this primate from
Madagascar uses its long
middle finger to scoop out the
insect larvae lurking beneath.
2 This relative of
3 This monkey from
the lemurs is the
only primate to Borneo has the biggest
produce venom. nose and is also the best
primate swimmer.
Primate
party
Our closest relatives certainly This gibbon’s
make a playful, noisy bunch. throat sac helps
project his call
Monkeys and apes, lemurs, and across 11⁄ 5 miles
(2 km).
lorises use brains and brawn to
survive in the wild. Some—like
us—are more at home on the 4 The largest
gibbon at up to
ground, while others prefer to 351⁄2 in (90 cm), it is
be up in the trees. found across forests
in Southeast Asia.
7 This African
3 Most cetaceans
live in salt water,
but this one lives
in the rivers of a
vast rain forest.
5 This thick-
bodied whale has an
enormous curved mouth—
the largest of any animal—and
a heavy skull that it uses to smash
through solid sea ice.
Aquatic
The head makes
up one-third of
this animal’s
total weight.
mammals
This whale can
grow up to
60 ft (18 m).
Fatty blubber
under the skin
Dolphins and whales are cetaceans—air- keeps the heat in.
TEST YOURSELF
9 Biggest heart,
Sperm whale
biggest tongue, biggest
animal ever! It can be up to Orca
105 ft (32 m) in length. Common bottlenose
STARTER
dolphin
Narwhal
10The world’s biggest Blue whale
animal with teeth, this
cetacean can dive to great
depths to hunt squid.
CHALLENGER
Beluga whale
Long-finned
pilot whale
Indo-Pacific
finless porpoise
11 Here is a
whale
12 Also known as
Dall’s porpoise
the “killer whale,” Bowhead whale
this mammal The spiral
is actually a tusk is used to
attract mates.
big dolphin.
7. Common bottlenose dolphin 8. Dwarf sperm whale 9. Blue whale 10. Sperm whale 11. Beluga whale 12. Orca 13. Narwhal 14. Cuvier’s beaked whale
ANSWERS: 1. Long-finned pilot whale 2. Dall’s porpoise 3. Amazon river dolphin 4. Indo-Pacific finless porpoise 5. Bowhead whale 6. Humpback whale
58 NATURE KNOW-IT-ALL
Invertebrates
Animals without a backbone are known as
invertebrates. They make up more than 80 percent 01. As a giant centipede, you have
more than 20 pairs of jointed legs on your
of all types of animal and are incredibly varied. segmented body. As some pairs step
forward, the rest will follow.
Invertebrates include some with hard outer cases,
such as insects and shellfish, and soft-bodied
animals such as jellyfish and worms.
grasp prey.
ers
I don’t believe it su
ck
When a pistol shrimp snaps its claws, the sound s
is so loud that it sends out shock waves strong pu
to
Types of invertebrates
Cnidarians: This is Worms: There are Molluscs: This group Arthropods: These Echinoderms: These
a group of simple different kinds of includes slugs and include spiders and include sea urchins
invertebrates with long-bodied worms. snails. Molluscs are relatives. They have and starfish, which
tentacles, such as Some can burrow soft and fleshy and an outer skeleton are shaped like disks
jellyfish and corals. and others swim. often have a shell. and jointed legs. or stars.
12.5 trillion
In numbers
400,000
Number of known beetle
species, the largest group
of insects. Very many more
await discovery.
Extreme living
14⁄5 oz An invertebrate holds the animal
(50 g) Weight of a goliath
beetle, one of the heaviest record for high-altitude living. A type
flying insects—that’s more of jumping spider lives at heights of
than a golf ball. up to 22,000 ft (6,700 m) on the
slopes of Mount Everest. This little
0.0055 in
Invertebrate facts
predator feeds on tiny insects that A jellyfish has no
(0.139 mm) Length of the get blown high onto the mountain brain. Its simple
smallest known insect, a by the gales of the Himalayas. nervous system carries
fairy fly. electrical messages for
moving but cannot control
complex behavior.
Smart octopus
Although most invertebrates
have tiny brains, a few, such
as octopuses, are quite
intelligent. A super-smart
octopus is able to extract
lobsters from lobster traps,
or even make its escape
from public aquariums.
Living fossils
Horseshoe crabs (more related
to spiders than shellfish) have
been around for more than
400 million years.
60 NATURE KNOW-IT-ALL
2 Sunlight
Colored scales
at the edges are
the only way to
spot this insect. Insects Hair traps pollen
everywhere
4 Despite its name, this
jewel-like insect does not
sting, but it does lay its eggs
in other insects’ nests.
Hooked claws
TEST YOURSELF
17 That’s not a
stinger—it’s a long Emperor dragonfly
egg-laying tube
Desert locust
that can drill
into timber. Praying mantis
STARTER
American cockroach
Honeybee
Ladybug
Stag beetle
Males have
a bright blue
abdomen with Mayfly
black markings. African termite
CHALLENGER
Under
1 Deep red and covered in
green spots, this creature
waves its tentacles in the
the sea
water to trap tiny prey.
Prey is paralyzed
by venom. 5 This animal lives
attached to the rocks,
and is a bivalve, which
Big eyes help see
means it has two shell
clearly while moving
at high speeds. parts hinged together.
6 A pale shell is
a good disguise
for scurrying on Fibrous threads
a sandy beach. attach to rocks.
9. Chambered nautilus 10. Purple sea pen 11. Spanish shawl nudibranch 12. Lined chiton 13. Mushroom coral 14. Red general starfish 15. Peacock mantis shrimp
ANSWERS: 1. Strawberry anemone 2. Polyclad flatworm 3. Pacific sea nettle 4. Sea apple 5. Common mussel 6. Horned ghost crab 7. Blue-ringed octopus 8. Christmas tree tube worm
63
TEST YOURSELF
Common mussel
Red general starfish
STARTER
Blue-ringed
octopus
9 Unlike its relatives,
the squid and octopus, Horned ghost crab
this swimming Strawberry anemone
creature lives in
a mobile shell.
Mushroom coral
CHALLENGER
10 This is really Chambered nautilus
a branching Polyclad flatworm
colony of tiny Pacific sea nettle
animals that are like Peacock mantis
It has up to 90 miniature anemones. shrimp
sticky tentacles.
GENIUS!
does it eat them, but Purple sea pen
it steals their stingers for protection.
Sea apple
and stores them
Spanish shawl
on its back! nudibranch
The shell
is made of
8 plates.
14 The shape is a
Tube feet help
the animal giveaway! Each of this
13 Although move and grip. animal’s arms can grow
it might look back after injury.
rather fungus-
like, this creature
moves and slides
across soft sand.
Clubs
64
Distinctive yellow
and black bands
Pincers hold
captured prey.
Dense
red fur
Arachnids
5 This colorful, soft-
assemble
smaller insects.
6 This big, hairy
Front legs are raised
to reveal fangs and arachnid from
warn off enemies. North America
has a body up to
4 in (10 cm) long.
Feast your eyes on these eight-legged mini-beasts!
Arachnids are a type of invertebrate that includes
spiders, scorpions, ticks, and mites. While some of these
have a venomous bite, others have a stinger in their
tail, but they all use clever ways to catch their prey.
65
Strong muscles in
the pincers give a
Antennae-like powerful grip.
front legs
10 This arachnid likes to wander
into homes. It builds tunnel-like
webs in which it drags its
prey to feast.
TEST YOURSELF
Eight forward-facing
eyes help to judge
11 Lacking any venom, this distance accurately. Mexican red-knee
tarantula
tropical arachnid relies on long,
spiny front limbs to snag prey. House spider
Yellow scorpion
STARTER
Daddy long-legs
Pincers often contain
spider
poison glands. Sydney funnel-web
spider
Wasp spider
Goldenrod crab
13 When this big-eyed arachnid from
CHALLENGER
With pincers
12 spider
North America springs into action, it Diving bell spider
and a flat body, this arachnid
rarely misses its target—it can jump six
might look like a scorpion, but Giant, Emperor scorpion
times the length of its body.
lacks the tail and stinger of one. venomous Regal jumping spider
fangs
Whip scorpion
Whip spider
Broad-headed
GENIUS!
Birds
nt
wa are
r.
p
te
ns
tra
There are more than 10,000
he
different kinds of birds living in
ses
its t
habitats that vary from wetlands,
er clo
moorlands, coasts, and forests to
s it h
city streets. Being a bird means
The kingfsh
eyelids a
leading a busy life. Flying uses
up a lot of energy, so birds need
plenty of fuel in the form of food.
What is a bird?
Plumage: Vertebrate: A bird is
All birds have a vertebrate, but has
body feathers more neck bones than
and, usually, most other animals
bare legs with backbones. Wings: The
and feet. forelimbs of
birds are in the
form of wings,
but not all birds
can fly.
I don’t believe it
In 1956, a five-year-old albatross called
Wisdom was ringed so that her movements could
be tracked. She was still alive in 2017, aged 66.
Flying facts
Every feather The oilbird from South
Feathers are made from keratin, has a hard America sleeps in caves
a material also found in animal central quill
or shaft. during the day and flies at night,
hair, nails, and reptile scales. Some using batlike echolocation.
feathers are fluffy for warmth, but
most of the outer ones are flat and Birds’ beaks contain a
stiffened to improve streamlining mineral that is sensitive to
and aid flight. Earth’s magnetic fields. This helps
them navigate on migration.
03.
Strange bills
Grab the
fish in your bill, float
up to the surface, and
return to the perch to
swallow your meal.
2 Showing off its spectacular 4 Known for its deep red color,
plumage by dancing in this water bird uses its long beak
the trees is how this to probe for insects in the mud.
bird attracts a mate. 3 In Central America the
long green tail feathers of this
bird, which can be around
3 ft (1 m) long, were used in
ceremonial headdresses.
Birds of
a feather
1 The Amazon
rain forest is the ideal
habitat for a bird that
only eats leaves of trees.
The tail was thought
They are masters of land and water, and to resemble a harp-
the champions of the sky—welcome to the like instrument.
STARTER
hard-to-reach fruit. cockatoo
Toucan
Indian peacock
12 The
Flamingo
claws of this
colorful
bird have an
excellent grip,
which helps with Emu
the everyday tasks of Scarlet ibis
CHALLENGER
clasping onto branches Kiwi
and grasping food. Blue-and-yellow
macaw
Lesser bird
of paradise
Southern cassowary
Wingspan is
41–45 in (104–114 cm)
Hoatzin
Resplendent quetzal
13 Well known in Superb lyrebird
GENIUS!
Japan, a pair of these Red-crowned crane
birds will dance and Great hornbill
honk in a beautiful Gray-crowned crane
courtship display.
17 A fan-like tuft of
stiff golden head Red, inflatable
feathers gives this throat pouch
bird its name.
The big
wings are
too weak
Reddish-brown, for flight.
spiky feathers
1 A wedge-shaped tail
allows this bird to turn
while in flight, and also
helps to identify it. 2 Found in
icy coniferous
forests, this bird has
pointed wings, much like
a hawk’s, and can hunt
in thick snow.
The wings can
measure 6 ft (1.8 m)
across from tip to tip.
Deadly
hunters
4 Fishes can
be slippery prey,
but this bird has
spiky, clawed
3 A tiny hunter, this talons for keeping
Asian bird targets Watch out! There’s a bird of prey overhead. These a firm grip.
small prey, such as feathered hunters all have a taste for meat. Some
insects and birds.
prefer rotting, dead animals (known as carrion) but
most need fresh prey, and use their deadly talons
and sharp beaks to make a kill.
5 One of the biggest
flying birds, this species
is found soaring over
the longest mountain
range of South America.
TEST YOURSELF
Rüppell’s vulture
Bald eagle
STARTER
Peregrine falcon
Barn owl
7 Faster
than any other Andean condor
CHALLENGER
Long, animal, this hunter Secretary bird
feathery can reach up to 199 mph
tufts Harpy eagle
(320 km/h) when dive-
Osprey
bombing through the air.
Striking white
head feathers Red kite
Pied falconet
GENIUS!
Eurasian eagle owl
8 One of the
Northern hawk owl
biggest of its kind at
around 291⁄2 in (75 cm),
this hunter’s favorite
prey are rabbits and hares.
Its huge orange eyes are
three times more sensitive
than the human eye.
Strong talons
snatch fish near
the water’s surface. 9 The national emblem of
the US also appears on the
country’s coat of arms.
Heart-shaped face
10 Super-sensitive
hearing helps this
pale nighttime
predator track
down mice and A powerful
voles in the dark. hooked beak
makes it easy for
the bird to tear
off flesh and
break bones.
7. Peregrine falcon 8. Eurasian eagle owl 9. Bald eagle 10. Barn owl 11. Rüppell’s vulture 12. Secretary bird
ANSWERS: 1. Red kite 2. Northern hawk owl 3. Pied falconet 4. Osprey 5. Andean condor 6. Harpy eagle
72 NATURE KNOW-IT-ALL
Types of reptile
Crocodilians
These predatory
Reptiles
crocodiles and
alligators with long
With hard, scaly skins and body heat controlled by outside
toothy jaws include temperatures, reptiles are unique animals. Most of them live
the largest reptiles.
in tropical forests and warm deserts, but some can cope with
cooler habitats. A few, such as sea turtles and sea snakes, are
Lizards and snakes
This is the biggest
perfectly at home in the oceans.
reptile group and
What is a reptile?
includes lizards—
with or without
legs—and snakes.
Vertebrate: All reptiles
have a backbone and Cold-blooded: The
a hard bony skeleton. body temperature of
Turtles and tortoises reptiles matches that
of their surroundings.
Both aquatic turtles
and land-living Lays eggs: Most
tortoises have reptiles lay eggs, but
protective shield- a few bear live young.
like shells.
Scaly skin: Hard scales
help protect the body.
Tuatara
This New Zealand
in.
reptile is the only
heir sk
nt
survivor of a group
s have bo
that lived at the time
of the dinosaurs.
ile ny plates embedde di
d
co
Cro
I don’t believe it
Some species of skinks (a type of lizard)
have green blood, which gives them green
hearts, bones, and tongues, too.
16,000
In numbers
Muscular tail
can grip
branches.
1 Although slow-
3 A wormlike
lure on the
tongue of this
patient predator Pink lure
attracts fishes into its open
mouth, which then snaps 5 The world’s largest lizard,
shut with a powerful bite. 4 By biting its reaching lengths of 10 ft (3 m), lives
on tiny islands in Indonesia, where
Reptile
tail, and rolling into
a spiky ball, this it is the top predator, hunting prey
armored lizard up to the size of deer.
fends off predators.
room
Scaly skin may make a reptile look like it
belongs to a prehistoric age, but these
animals are still found in most places on
Earth! As cold-blooded creatures, they
rely on the warmth of the sun’s rays to
get them moving, and live on both
land and water. 6 This lizard has an excellent grip. It has
splayed-out toes with pads covered in
sticky “hairs,” which help it climb and
cling to anything—even ceilings!
TEST YOURSELF
9 In a dry Australian desert, spiky
Radiated tortoise
skin is a good defense against 11A snorkel-like tube on Green turtle
predators for this ant-eating lizard. its nose helps this turtle
Nile crocodile
STARTER
breathe while it’s under the
10 Found in New
water of South American rivers. Tokay gecko
Zealand, this lizard Komodo dragon
looks prehistoric
Sharp claws help
with its spiny crest. dig burrows
for shelter.
Gila monster
Up to 68 teeth Common green
CHALLENGER
line the jaws. iguana
Marine iguana
Panther chameleon
Alligator snapping
turtle
12 Brute strength helps this
GENIUS!
Islands, this is the only lizard that
Tuatara
feeds on seaweed. Usually
black, the males turn a vibrant Armadillo girdled
lizard
green or pink during
breeding season.
7. Gharial 8. Gila monster 9. Thorny devil 10. Tuatara 11. Matamata 12. Nile crocodile 13. Marine iguana 14. Green turtle 15. Radiated tortoise
ANSWERS: 1. Panther chameleon 2. Common green iguana 3. Alligator snapping turtle 4. Armadillo girdled lizard 5. Komodo dragon 6. Tokay gecko
76 NATURE KNOW-IT-ALL
Scaly
serpents
1 Most snakes lay
eggs, but this gloriously
green climbing species
from South America gives
birth to live young.
A scaled hood
Mottled markings helps the
help this snake snake look
disguise itself amongst bigger, warding
rain forest vegetation. off predators.
4 In the Amazon
basin, the world’s
heaviest snake—weighing 5 The only venomous
up to 542 lb (246 kg)— snake in many European
spends most of its countries, this species can fold
time in water. away its fangs when not in use. Distinctive zigzag pattern
8. Western diamondback rattlesnake 9. Elephant-trunk snake 10. Black mamba 11. Eastern coral snake 12. Common egg-eating snake
ANSWERS: 1. Emerald tree boa 2. Eastern hog-nosed snake 3. Indian cobra 4. Green anaconda 5. Common adder 6. Gaboon viper 7. Spiny bush viper
77
10 Possibly the
fastest snake, this
speedy striker
from Africa is
lethally venomous.
By wriggling, it punctures
the shell of its meal to
reach the yolky goodness. 11 The brilliant color bands of this
American snake are a warning that
its venom can be deadly.
12 This African snake
swallows its meal whole
and digests it in
TEST YOURSELF
its stomach.
STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
Amphibians
The word “amphibian” means
Frog or toad: what’s the difference?
“leading two kinds of life.” Many
of these animals start their lives
underwater as tadpoles and grow
into adults that are as much at home
on land as in water. Most amphibians
prefer damp places with enough
water in which to lay their eggs.
Frogs Toads
Most kinds of frogs around the Toads usually have rough, warty
world have a smooth, moist skin skins and squat bodies. Most have
and very long back legs, which shorter legs than frogs, and prefer
Types of amphibian makes them the best jumpers. to walk rather than hop.
02.
Frogs and toads
Most kinds of amphibians
How to hunt like a tree frog
Open your
are frogs or toads. They mouth wide and stick
usually have long back out your long tongue
legs for swimming, to reach your prey.
hopping, or burrowing.
Caecilians
The wormlike shape
of the tropical legless
caecilians is ideal for
burrowing in soil
or leaf litter.
Keep away!
I don’t believe it Many amphibians have
brightly colored skin. This is a
Some American salamanders warning that they are
have no lungs and breathe entirely poisonous and may be
through their skin. deadly to eat.
Life-cycle of a frog
Tadpole tales
The tadpoles of amphibians that
In Europe and North America, most amphibians lay their eggs in breed in fast-flowing streams have
water, where the tadpoles can swim. Amphibians native to special suckers so they can cling to
tropical rainforests often lay eggs on wet ground. rocks and not get washed away.
Regrowing limbs
In the same way as lizards often do, salamanders may
grow back tails lost through injury—but they go a stage
further. Some salamanders can regrow lost limbs,
producing perfect new feet and toes in the process.
102
The number of cane toads that
Glass frog were introduced to Australia in
1935. There are now millions of
Some kinds of frogs from tropical North them and they are major pests.
and South America, called glass frogs,
have transparent skin on their underside.
This means that their skeleton and even 10
The number of months spent
their beating heart is visible inside. underground by the African
bullfrog in very dry years.
Red blood vessels can be
seen through the clear skin
on the frog’s belly.
80 NATURE KNOW-IT-ALL
amphibians
perfect rainforest
camouflage.
5 Orange bumps
Semi-webbed feet
4 A safe place to store
eggs is in the skin of
your back, as this South
American frog does.
A flash of its
colorful eyes scares
away predators.
8 In Northern European
ponds, the male of
this species dances
and fans its tail to
impress females.
The toes are not
webbed, unlike
those of a frog. Only the males
Yellow belly with
have this frill,
black splotches
which grows in
7 This looks like an eel breeding seasons.
but is really an extra-long
salamander with tiny
legs—it can be 31⁄2 ft Legs are around
(1.1 m) long. 4
⁄5 in (2 cm) long
Pointy
nose
STARTER
Red-eyed tree frog
Japanese giant
salamander
Wallace’s flying frog
Thick, blunt toes
12 Yellow spots mark the
positions of poisonous
glands on this European Red salamander
CHALLENGER
horned frog
Surinam toad
Caecilian
Crocodile newt
blood-colored amphibian
lacks lungs, so it breathes
entirely through its skin.
9. African bullfrog 10. Long-nosed horned frog 11. Oriental fire-bellied toad 12. Fire salamander 13. Japanese giant salamander 14. Caecilian 15. Red salamander
ANSWERS: 1. Wallace’s flying frog 2. Blue-and-black poison dart frog 3. Axolotl 4. Surinam toad 5. Crocodile newt 6. Red-eyed tree frog 7. Amphiuma 8. Great crested newt
82 NATURE KNOW-IT-ALL
Types of fish
Jawless fish
With more than 120 species, this kind of fish,
including this hagfish, do not have a jaw, but
have sucker disks with rows of small teeth.
02. Swim in tight
formation, to form a big, swirling
bait ball. This will confuse the
predators, who will find it tricky
to pick out individual prey.
Bony fish
Most fish, more than 33,000 species, including this
Bluefish and
catfish, have a bony skeleton and a gas-filled bladder, barracudas circle
which helps them keep afloat. the bait ball.
In numbers
The number, in millions,
Fish scales
Diamond-shaped:
04: The tail then The garfish has
swings back as close-fitting,
before, while the interlocking
fins keep the fish scales, which
level in the water. work like a suit
of armor, and
provide protection.
Toothlike: Sharks
are covered in
tiny toothlike
How fish swim
scales, which
makes the skin
02: The sweeping rough—like
Fish swim in a wavelike motion. Their bodies tail pushes against sandpaper.
are packed with strong muscles that bend the the water, helping
spine one way and then the other—a motion to force the fish
that propels them through the water. forward.
Breathing holes
Freshwater
f ish
From rivers and streams, to lakes and ponds,
freshwater is a habitat for many kinds of fish. Some
like water to be flowing and churning, while others
prefer it calm and still. Can you spot who’s who
under the surface? Can grow 5 ft
(1.5 m) long, from
tail to the tip of
9 The deep-olive color helps this stealthy predator its pointed nose.
remain camouflaged among water
reeds before it darts out to
grab prey. 10 Armed with
razor-sharp teeth, this
South American fish
bands together in shoals
for safety—and
sometimes to eat.
85
TEST YOURSELF
Long snout is
covered with
sensory pores Goldfish
Koi carp
STARTER
Pike
11 Found only in North America, this fish Freshwater angelfish
collects prey such as plankton by swimming Red-bellied piranha
with its mouth wide-open. Betta fish
CHALLENGER
uses its whisker-like barbels
to feel its way around in It uses its colorful Red-tailed catfish
Barbel fins to attract mates and
cloudy waters. Bumblebee goby
scare off enemies. Australian lungfish
Leaf fish
Grows up to
8 ft (2.5 m) long
Arowana
Elephant fish
GENIUS!
Nile tilapia
River lamprey
14 Named for its blue-and-green
American paddlefish
color, this North American fish can be Clown featherback
identified by the pink line running along
its length. It can weigh up to 55 lb (25 kg).
The bright
underside gives
the fish its name. 15Watch out! Lurking in the Amazonian
swamps, this fish can fire a 500–volt
electric shock to stun and capture prey—a
shocking surprise.
A single anal
fin stretches
to the tail.
Grows up to
61⁄2 ft (2 m)
Strange, glowing
organ or “fishing rod”
1 Shaped like a
4 A narrow mouth
An expandable mouth
helps it swallow large prey.
Most of the world’s 33,500 or so different species of fish live 10 In this species, it’s the
in the oceans. Some live in the deep, where all is dark and father who carries the eggs,
in a pouch on his belly, and
cold. Others swim in the sunlit open seas, while many more when they hatch, he gives birth!
live on colorful coral reefs. How many can you recognize?
Venomous barb
11 This fish
STARTER
Spotted seahorse
Flat dorsal fin acts as Hammerhead
a sucker so the fish can shark
attach itself to its host. Porcupine fish
13 By sticking
itself to the underside Humpback
of whales and sharks, anglerfish
CHALLENGER
Butterflyfish
Great barracuda
Coelacanth
15 This striped, nocturnal fish can be
around 5 ft (1.5 m) long. It has strong teeth
and can bite through the hardest shellfish.
88 NATURE KNOW-IT-ALL
In numbers
the water like an
(6,000 km) The length of
umbrella, this bird
a giant colony of Argentine
creates shade to
ants in Europe.
attract fish—making
them easy pickings
Using tools 100 for the bird.
The cleverest animals can use The number of words
tools to help them get food— learned by Alex, a famous
such as this young chimpanzee African gray parrot.
learning to “fish” for juicy Flatfish: By changing
termites with a stick. color to match
20 the sea floor, fish
such as the plaice
The number of different
alarm calls used by disguise themselves
from predators.
How to work meerkats to warn others
in the group of different
as a team kinds of danger.
Tricky
Tail track 1 Footprints with two toes
This mammal
walks on the Forelimb feet
soles of it feet. are smaller than
the hind feet
6 A tree-dwelling rodent
STARTER
Pigeon
Rat
Bear
CHALLENGER
Sidewinder snake
Flipper tracks Deer
Ostrich
Small hook at the Squirrel
end where the
animal curls its tail
GENIUS!
hind legs give it speed. Penguin
Beaver
Hind feet
are webbed.
13 These paw prints
8. Sidewinder snake 9. Rabbit 10. Rat 11. Penguin 12. Crocodile 13. Dog
ANSWERS: 1. Ostrich 2. Beaver 3. Deer 4. Pigeon 5. Bear 6. Squirrel 7. Seal
92
Green-blue
eggs can be
up to 51⁄2 in
(14 cm) long.
TEST YOURSELF
3 These creatures lay
Chicken
eggs in huge colonies on
Ostrich islands around bitterly
Cassowary cold Antarctica.
STARTER
Leopard tortoise
Corn snake
Frog spawn
Dinosaur
4 The animal that lays
Get cracking
42–46 days to hatch.
Cuckoo
Lesser spotted
dogfish 5 Almost all furry
Elegant crested Inside an egg is a baby animal just waiting to hatch out. animals give birth
tinamou The eggs of birds must have a hard shell, to stop them to live young—but
Common guillemot
GENIUS!
20 Tassels help to
14 This beautiful,
1 In the warty
2 Enormous forward-
facing eyes help this
small primate see at night
as it leaps through trees.
3 Unlike others of its kind,
a mirror? Thousands of
years ago, all of these
mammals had brown
eyes, but now they can
Eye spy
be blue and green as well.
What a sight! All animals have eyes that are just right for them.
While some eyes work well underwater, others are designed
for life on land, and some even see clearly in the dark. But all
of them help animals take in the world around them.
6 A compound eye
STARTER
eye filters
Cayman Island.
Husky dog
different colors
Horsefly
Camel
Crocodile
Golden iris
16 Extra-long
CHALLENGER
blown into the eye of invertebrate has multiple, Panther chameleon
this desert animal. skillful arms, a big brain, and Giant Pacific octopus
excellent vision to match.
Cane toad
Great horned owl
Bushbaby
Horizontal pupil
draws into a slit
during the day Cuttlefish
Starry puffer fish
Blue iguana
GENIUS!
Red big-eye fish
Leaf viper
Leopard gecko
18 At only 11⁄2 in (3.8 cm), Boomslang snake
this is a small eye for the
world’s biggest land
animal, which can grow
up to 241⁄2 ft (7.5 m) long. A horizontal, rectangular
19
20 The eyes of
21 This sea
this dangerous,
slithery reptile animal moves its
have no eyelids, eyes independently
meaning it of each other, and is
cannot blink. known for swelling
up like a balloon
when threatened.
11. Domestic cat 12. Red big-eye fish 13. Leaf viper 14. Husky dog 15. Blue iguana 16. Camel 17. Giant Pacific octopus 18. Elephant 19. Goat 20. Boomslang snake 21. Starry puffer fish
ANSWERS: 1. Cane toad 2. Bushbaby 3. Leopard gecko 4. Human 5. Great horned owl 6. Horsefly 7. Crocodile 8. Panther chameleon 9. Red-eyed tree frog 10. Cuttlefish
96 NATURE KNOW-IT-ALL
Red tentacles
Plants Types of plants
Nonflowering: These
plants scatter spores
(dust-like cells), which
produce sweet, A world without foliage and flowers grow into new plants
on moist soil.
glue-like
droplets to would be a far less colorful place.
attract the fly. The green leaves of plants make food
using the energy in sunlight, and—
as part of forests and grasslands—
they provide habitats for animals
that live on land. In one way or Flowering: After
another, we all rely on plants. pollination, these plants
form seeds inside fruits.
The seeds scatter and
develop into new plants.
or the le
As the fly struggles,
tes f af
more tentacles stick u to
to its body. in co Nutrients from the fly’s
m il body seep into the
a
0
ro
ou
un
It takes ab
d
th
ef
y.
01. As a carnivorous
(meat-eating) sundew, you are
03. Once the fly is dead,
trigger the leaf to produce
perfectly designed as a killer chemicals that will break
plant. First, attract a fly with the down the fly’s body, and then
sugary drops on your leaf. absorb all its nutrients.
Parts of a plant
Record-breaking trees
The world’s tallest tree is a
coastal redwood from California,
Leaves make nicknamed Hyperion, which reaches
food using energy a height of 3803⁄10 ft (115.92 m).
from sunlight.
Fruits contain
seeds which, when A bristlecone pine found in the
Flowers have scattered, produce mountains of the western US is
pollen that is more plants.
carried by insects
the world’s oldest tree, and also one of
or wind to other the oldest of all living things. Its seed
plants, fertilizing first sprouted more than 5,000 years ago.
them so they can
produce seeds.
The Guyana chestnut produces
the widest flowers of any tree—
Stem carries water growing up to 26 in (66 cm) across.
Roots anchor the and minerals into
plant and take in the leaves, fruits, The coco de mer Palm produces the
water and minerals and flowers.
from the soil. largest seed of any kind of plant— each
can weigh up to 66 lb (30 kg).
13 million lb
In numbers
32,000 years
The age of a seed of the
Arctic Campion—a small
flowering plant—that
was planted and
successfully grown.
Cheeky monkey
2,000 The Dracula simia is an orchid
The number of seeds that can with a surprising feature—the
form in a single sunflower. inside of it looks like a
monkey’s face!
Titan arum: This plant has the Spanish moss: Not technically Giant water lily: This aquatic Stone plant: This plant
tallest flowering spike, at 10 ft a moss, this flowering plant plant has a giant leaf, which looks like a pebble to deter
(3 m), which stinks of rotting blankets trees and absorbs can measure more than 61⁄2 ft plant-eaters, until its flower
meat to attract pollinating flies. moisture from the air. (2 m) across. gives the game away!
98
2 Native to warm
Spots mimic and tropical regions,
aphids to attract the petals of this large,
predatory insects.
trumpet-shaped flower
are used to make
a type of tea.
Flower
The flowers
begin opening
from bottom
to top.
power
Flowers are the parts of plants from
which fruits or seeds develop. We love
them because they brighten our gardens
and homes, but their main purpose is to
help plants with pollination. Their showy
colors and sometimes powerful perfumes
attract insects and other animals, who then
carry pollen from one plant to another.
8 In many cultures,
Each head is made these fragrant blooms
up of many florets.
are symbols of purity.
They produce a lot
7 These flowers grow wild in of orange pollen,
Asia, where they are the symbol which can stain
of wealth, and have large heads fingers and clothes.
that come in many colors.
99
10 Said to resemble
13 In Europe,
A native of Australasia
12
this pretty trumpet-
and made up of a cluster shaped flower is a
of bright-red spikes of sure sign that spring
flowers, this flower head has arrived.
looks like it could be
used for cleaning.
14 Prized in Asia, the petals
of this aquatic flower
open during the day and
close at night, perhaps
to stop the pollen from
being damaged by
morning dew.
TEST YOURSELF
Daffodil
Sunflower
STARTER
Tulip
Marigold
15 Fragrant oils Lotus
from this flower are used Rose
to soothe cuts and scrapes,
and to repel mosquitoes.
Hibiscus
CHALLENGER
Chrysanthemum
Lily
The central disk
is made of up to Blue poppy
2,000 tiny flowers. Crocus
17 Found in the Himalayas, this
blue flower has a red European Lavender
relative that is a symbol of
16 These tall, remembrance of war.
nodding, bright-
Lady’s slipper
yellow flowers orchid
always grow
Bird-of-paradise
facing the sun. flower
GENIUS!
One record-
King protea
breaking
specimen grew Red-hot poker
to a height of Bottlebrush
18 The national flower Foxglove
30 ft (9.17 m).
of South Africa survives
wildfires by growing buds
from an underground stem.
10. Bird-of-paradise flower 11. Rose 12. Bottlebrush 13. Daffodil 14. Lotus 15. Lavender 16. Sunflower 17. Blue poppy 18. King protea
ANSWERS: 1. Lady’s slipper orchid 2. Hibiscus 3. Foxglove 4. Marigold 5. Crocus 6. Red-hot poker 7. Chrysanthemum 8. Lily 9. Tulip
2 When ripe, this
Sweet, creamy flesh
tree-borne fruit tastes
like the sweet, creamy
sauce you might pour
1 This fruit can taste
over a dessert.
sour—but when cooked
Smooth-skinned yellow
with sugar it can be used variety grows in warm
to make pies and desserts. areas such as Hawaii
Fruit
halves of this nut’s
shell break open to
reveal a softer inside.
and nuts
In North America, crops are
flooded to protect fruit from
cold and wind.
5 Crushed to make
a sauce or jelly, these
Fruits grow from the flowers of plants—they berries are popular
are the parts we can eat. They come in different at Christmas and
Thanksgiving.
colors that entice you to dive in for a bite.
This is exactly what the plants want—by eating
the fruits, animals help scatter the seeds inside
in their waste.
7 These are not
technically fruits, but
an expanded part of
the stem that contains
6 Found in
tiny flowers, which
Southeast Asia, the are fertilized by wasps
“King of the Fruits” who enter through a
is one of the hole in the bottom.
stinkiest in the
world, but has a
delicious taste. Tiny seeds embedded
in reddish-pink flesh
Inside every round
fruitlet is a seed.
Thorny rind
9 You’ll find these
fruits growing on a
cactus in deserts and
other dry places.
Sharp spine
8 After developing from
white flowers, these
berries are best picked
when they are at their
darkest—but watch out
for thorns on the bush!
101
The fruit is
pale green
before it
TEST YOURSELF
ripens and
takes a Blackberries
darker color.
Walnuts
STARTER
Cranberries
10 Most of these small, soft, Blueberries
distinctively colored fruits Grapefruit
are grown in North America. Watermelon
CHALLENGER
consumed for its Hazelnuts
delicious juice. Pomegranate
12 Expect lots of small seeds surrounded
Passion fruit
by juicy red flesh when you cut open the Gooseberries
tough pink skin of this fruit.
Custard apple
Mulberries
GENIUS!
Durian
Prickly pears
Cape gooseberries
Pine nuts
14 This small, round, smooth-
shelled nut, also called a
cobnut, is a favorite food
of woodland squirrels.
13 Originating from
15 This huge, juicy fruit—that
Peru and related grows on vines—is just what
to tomatoes, these you need to quench
sweet fruits grow a raging thirst!
inside papery husks.
The biggest
can weigh
more than
200 lb (90 kg).
Edible seeds
16 These seeds
are produced
inside the
cones of a type
of evergreen
tree, but only
20 percent of
species have
seeds big enough
to be worth eating.
1 Each
bulb is
divided into 2 The pink
Fat roots grow
cloves that pack a leafstalks here under the soil.
very strong taste. are popular in sweet
desserts—but the big
4 Packed
The stalks can be green leaves are poisonous.
red, light pink, or with sticky starch, called
light green. tapioca, this tropical root
vegetable is used for baking.
fruits, but because they are used in savory dishes, they are color of an organ in
the human body, these Tube-like
known as vegetables. They are all versions of wild plants that are usually dried, and shape
farmers have learned to cultivate over thousands of years. must then be soaked
and cooked before
they are safe to eat.
5 This small-bud
10 First grown
in the Andes,
this root vegetable (meaning
it grows underground) is
crammed full of nutrients.
8 In North
13 This root
vegetable
grows best in
the tropics, and
has a distinctive
sugary flavor.
Soft,
rounded
This vegetable leaves TEST YOURSELF
comes in many
different colors.
16 The name of Garlic
this variety of Chinese Carrots
smooth-leaved Sweet potato
STARTER
cabbage means Green beans
“white vegetable” Pumpkin
in Cantonese.
Eggplant
Kidney beans
Used in
most canned
baked beans
Asparagus
18 As well as being Radishes
CHALLENGER
Calabash
21 With its origins in Water chestnut
20This crunchy Italy, this vegetable is Cassava root
root vegetable a variety of cauliflower Romanesco broccoli
grows in muddy that produces edible
marshes in Asia. flower buds.
13. Sweet potato 14. Radishes 15. Butternut squash 16. Bok choy 17. Navy beans 18. Calabash 19. Watercress 20. Water chestnut 21. Romanesco broccoli
ANSWERS: 1. Garlic 2. Rhubarb 3. Kale 4. Cassava root 5. Brussels sprouts 6. Eggplant 7. Kidney beans 8. Pumpkin 9. Asparagus 10. Oca 11. Carrots 12. Green beans
GEOGRAPHY
GENIUS
3
Spot the camels
Natural wonders are found all across the
globe, but there is more to some of them
than meets the eye. See if you can spy the
camels moving across this stretch of the
Sahara desert. They are not just a mirage!
106 GEOGRAPHY GENIUS
4.6 billion
In numbers
3,958 miles
(6,371 km) The distance
Ea
to Earth’s center.
rt
7 miles
h
th
is
Deserts: A desert can be Grasslands: These get more Tundra: Life must survive Polar regions: Nearly all
hot or cold, but is always rain than deserts, but not long, dark, freezing winters life in the icy polar regions
very dry, with little life. enough for forests to grow. in this near-polar habitat. lives in the seas and oceans.
107
Right temperature
Energy from
the sun
Just right!
Nitrogen
Earth has just the right
Crust: Earth’s rocky shell Atmosphere: temperature to ensure that
N
is made of a thin oceanic A layer of air
crust and thicker helps keep the O water doesn’t freeze or boil
CO
continental crust. planet warm. away into space. The air also
2
has the perfect mixture of
Oxygen gases needed to support life.
Carbon
dioxide Water
I don’t
believe it 05. Any water plants
Earth’s rotation is slowing do not absorb flows
down. One billion years ago, into rivers and back
a full day on Earth would to the sea.
have lasted just 20 hours.
Mountains: The air is cold Oceans: These include a Rivers and wetlands: These Forests: A dense forest can
at high altitudes, so this wide variety of habitats, from rich habitats support lots be home to a huge variety
habitat is similar to tundra. icy polar seas to coral reefs. of plants and animals. of life in all its forms.
108 GEOGRAPHY GENIUS
3
Dividing
America from
1 The swampy shores of this water
Europe and Africa,
High
the second-largest
body, lined with lagoons and
ocean covers about
beaches, are often battered by
41,100,000 sq miles
destructive hurricanes.
(106,460,000 sq km).
5
By far the biggest ocean in the
world, at around 621⁄2 million sq miles
(161,760,000 sq km), this water body covers
almost half the globe and has an average 6 Named after a
12 Floating ice in
winter is a danger
to ships crossing this
9 Despite its dark, sinister name, large, cold sea.
this almost completely land-locked
sea near Turkey is a beautiful,
7 tranquil stretch of water.
12
8 This scenic European
sea lies between the 11 Though it is called
coasts of Italy and Croatia. a sea, this is actually the
biggest salt lake on Earth,
9 at around 143,000 sq miles 15 The color of
8
(371,000 sq km). the water flowing
in from a great
Chinese river
14 A vital trade route
gives this water 16 Rocky islands
for centuries, this sea body its name.
also supports a huge dot the waters of
13Many of the world’s Halong Bay (below) at
fishing industry.
earliest civilizations flourished the southern edge of
on the shores of this sea, this sea in the Far East.
which is surrounded by
17
three continents.
16
21
19
Most of this ocean lies
in the warm tropical
region to the south of the
country that it is named after.
21 A view from
12. Sea of Okhotsk 13. Mediterranean Sea 14. Arabian Sea 15. Yellow Sea 16. South China Sea 17. Red Sea 18. Persian Gulf 19. Indian Ocean 20. Java Sea 21. Coral Sea
ANSWERS: 1. Gulf of Mexico 2. Labrador Sea 3. Atlantic Ocean 4. Caribbean Sea 5. Pacific Ocean 6. Scotia Sea 7. North Sea 8. Adriatic Sea 9. Black Sea 10. Laptev Sea 11. Caspian Sea
110 GEOGRAPHY GENIUS
waterways
two by this
river, which has
been painted by
many artists.
steamboats which
paddle along this
1 Its name
huge river.
5 Cutting through
means “white water
river” and it flows huge areas of tropical 8
through one of the rain forests, this is the
coldest regions of world’s biggest river,
North America. in terms of volume
3 of water.
3 Beginning at the
6 Big ocean-going
ships can use this 15 The waters
wide river to reach of this southern
cities in Argentina African river
and Paraguay. tumble over the
spectacular
Victoria Falls.
11. Volga 12. Indus 13. Nile 14. Euphrates 15. Zambezi 16. Lena 17. Shinano 18. Yangtze 19. Ganges 20. Mekong 21. Murray
ANSWERS: 1. Yukon 2. Mississippi 3. Colorado 4. Orinoco 5. Amazon 6. Paraná 7. Rhine 8. Seine 9. Congo 10. Danube
111
16
21
TEST YOURSELF
STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
Formerly known as
Mount McKinley, this is
the highest mountain
peak in North America,
at 20,308 ft (6,190 m).
5
6
TEST YOURSELF
STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
Peak puzzle
11 The highest peak in
Europe, with the largest
of its two cones reaching
18,510 ft (5,642 m), this
dormant volcano lies in
southern Russia. Earth’s crust is made of vast, slowly moving
plates of rock. In some places these crunch into
each other, pushing the land up into dramatic
Named for the color of its icy
summit, this is the highest mountain ranges, such as the Himalayas. In other
mountain in the Alps. places, volcanoes form where plates meet. Active
at first, they may then lie dormant (sleeping) for
many years then erupt suddenly.
9 This rugged mountain was
the home of the gods of
ancient Greek mythology.
10
11
According to tradition, Although the highest
this snow-capped volcano in the world, at 29,029 ft
12 is where Noah’s Ark came (8,848 m), this mountain
to rest in the great flood. in the Himalayas has
been climbed by
14 thousands of people.
15
16 17
17 The highest peak in
Japan, this dormant
Standing at 28,251 ft volcano has inspired
13
(8,611 m), this mountain Japanese artists and
still has the temporary poets for centuries.
name a surveyor gave
it in the 1850s.
Exposed by 18
This is the tallest mountain in
erosion, this huge Papua New Guinea, named
mass of granite is in 1888 by a German climber
the highest point who visited it.
in Malaysia, at
13,435 ft (4,095 m).
19
11. Mount Elbrus 12. Mount Ararat 13. Kilimanjaro 14. K2 15. Mount Everest 16. Lianhua Feng 17. Mount Fuji 18. Mount Kinabalu 19. Mount Wilhelm 20. Mount Kosciuszko 21. Mount Cook
ANSWERS: 1. Denali 2. Mauna Loa 3. Mount Whitney 4. Popocatépetl 5. Aconcagua 6. Sugarloaf Mountain 7. Vinson Massif 8. Table Mountain 9. Mont Blanc 10. Mount Olympus
114 GEOGRAPHY GENIUS
Wonders of
the world
Spectacular natural features created from rock, ice, and
water are found all over the world. Many are the result
of centuries of rock erosion, while others mark places
where molten rock or superheated water boil up from
deep in Earth’s crust. How many do you recognize?
3 Sacred to the
salt flat on Earth, formed by the green sulfuric acid make this landscape
evaporation of an ancient salt lake. in Ethiopia look like an alien planet!
has built up these terraces of white ground, this Icelandic hot spring but are a natural pattern of geometric shapes
rock in Turkey, which shimmer with regularly erupts into the air, reaching formed by a mass of hot molten rock, which
blue water. heights of up to 131 ft (40 m). shrank as it cooled, splitting into columns.
11 These spires of soft volcanic ash in 12 This Ethiopian volcano contains a lake of
Turkey are capped with harder rock searing hot molten lava. The cooling surface
that protects them from the rain. of the lava is crusted with black basalt rock.
14 These
multicolored rock
layers exposed in
this desert region of
China took millions
of years to form.
TEST YOURSELF
STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
Approximately 75 percent
of this country—the eastern
region—lies in Asia. The rest
is in Europe.
TEST YOURSELF
Australia
Chile
Canada
STARTER
Japan
Mexico
United Kingdom
Italy 3 The largest country
Russia in South America has
a tropical climate. The
2 Surrounded by the Indian and
Amazon river, which carries
Pacific oceans, most of the world’s more water than any other
largest island is desert, with its big on Earth, passes through it.
Brazil cities along the coast.
Madagascar
CHALLENGER
4 Once
Panama in South America is East African nations, this is the east coast of
Iran the world’s longest the oldest independent Africa, this island
country with more than country on is best known for
3,700 miles (6,000 km) of the continent. its unique wildlife,
Pacific Ocean coastline. including lemurs.
117
Countries
Islands in the Arctic
Ocean, where polar bears
and Arctic foxes live, also
make up this nation.
of the world
Grab your globe and dust off that atlas!
There are a total of 195 countries in the
world today; here are some of them, but
shown only as their outlines on a map. Use
these border shapes and the clues to identify
each nation and prove your geographical genius.
10 The second-largest country in the world
On the southernmost
13 African nation borders islands form this Asian
tip of Africa, the richest the Mediterranean Sea country, characterized
country on the continent to the north and the by modern cities and
has gold and diamond mines. Red Sea to the east. active volcanoes.
16 To the north, the 17 Two main islands in the 18 One of the four 19 With the South China 20 This European
Pyrenees mountains Pacific Ocean make up Scandinavian countries, Sea to the east, this country country looks like a boot
divide this country this nation of earthquakes, this nation has a long has land borders with kicking an island into
from France. volcanoes, and geysers. coastline lined with deep China, Laos, and Cambodia. the Mediterranean Sea.
sea inlets called fjords.
The crocodile-like shape This country lies
of this island gives it the to the east of India,
nickname “El Cocodrilo.” on the Bay of Bengal.
21 Made up of the 22 Sugar cane is grown 23 Called the Cradle 24 This low-lying tropical 25 A canal across
largest island in Europe, on the largest island of Western Civilization, land experiences a this country links
this nation includes a in the Caribbean, which this European country monsoon season. It the Atlantic and
northern region of the has a range of habitats— has more than 2,000 boasts lush vegetation Pacific oceans.
island to the west. from deserts to jungles. islands off the mainland. and a population of tigers.
13. South Africa 14. Egypt 15. Japan 16. Spain 17. New Zealand 18. Norway 19. Vietnam 20. Italy 21. United Kingdom 22. Cuba 23. Greece 24. Bangladesh 25. Panama
ANSWERS: 1. Russia 2. Australia 3. Brazil 4. Iran 5. Saudi Arabia 6. Algeria 7. Chile 8. Ethiopia 9. Madagascar 10. Canada 11. Mexico 12. Indonesia
118 GEOGRAPHY GENIUS
38 million
Cities
In numbers
46 mph
(74 km/h) The speed
How to build a city
of the world’s fastest
elevator, traveling
I don’t
between the 121 stories
believe it
02.
of the Shanghai Tower
in China’s largest city. Cities need homes. Plan In the caves of
houses and apartments in different Cappadocia in Turkey,
sizes and styles to accommodate a 36 underground cities
growing population. have been excavated,
dating back hundreds
Extreme living
The world’s highest
Beneath the bustle of a city, a subterranean system of city is La Rinconada
pipes, tunnels, and cables supplies clean water, removes in the Peruvian Andes, at
waste, and provides services and transport. 16,700 ft (5,100 m) above
sea level.
Monrovia, in Liberia,
Gas main carries is the world’s wettest
gas to local Water main
carries clean city, averaging 182 in
distributors.
water to (4,622 mm) of rain a year.
homes and
offices. Aswan, in Egypt, is
Railroad the driest city, with
underground only 1⁄33 in (1 mm) of rain
network takes
people across a year.
the city.
Sewer takes
away waste
matter for
treatment.
Above the
clouds
Towering 2,716 1⁄2 ft
Cities on water
Deep water (828 m) high, the
tunnel channels Cities often develop close to water
for trade and transportation. Venice Burj Khalifa in Dubai
water between
reservoirs and is built on 118 islands in Italy’s is the world’s tallest
treatment Venetian Lagoon. building. Constructed
centers. from 6,200 miles
(10,000 km) of steel, it
has 163 floors of
homes, offices,
and hotels.
City plans
Spanish cathedral has been under 3 This gleaming shrine was built
construction for more than 130 on a site that is sacred to both the
years—and is still not finished. Islamic and Jewish religions in Israel.
Cool
constructions 5 Stretching for more than
TEST YOURSELF
Eiffel Tower, Paris
9 This 98-ft- (30-m-) Taj Mahal, Agra
tall statue of a religious The Great Wall
STARTER
figure stands on the
Mount Rushmore,
summit of a mountain, South Dakota
overlooking a city
Great Sphinx of Giza
in Brazil.
CHALLENGER
Tower of Pisa
and is now a museum. visited by almost 7 million
Leshan Giant Buddha
people each year.
Christ the Redeemer,
Rio de Janeiro
11 Carved out of a
GENIUS!
Burj Khalifa, Dubai
Hagia Sophia,
Istanbul
Sagrada Família,
Barcelona
12 Despite being
13 Originally cut from solid 14 Made of white marble, 15 Found in Red Square in the capital city of Russia,
rock, this giant ancient Egyptian this beautiful building was this 16th-century structure was originally white,
sculpture has the body of a lion built by a Mughal emperor red, and gold, with the dazzling color scheme
and a human head. as a memorial to his wife. seen today appearing only in the 17th century.
8. Hagia Sophia, Istanbul 9. Christ the Redeemer, Rio de Janeiro 10. Eiffel Tower, Paris 11. Leshan Giant Buddha 12. Parthenon, Athens 13. Great Sphinx of Giza 14. Taj Mahal, Agra 15. St. Basil’s Cathedral, Moscow
ANSWERS: 1. Sagrada Família, Barcelona 2. Mount Rushmore, South Dakota 3. Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem 4. Tower of Pisa 5. The Great Wall 6. Burj Khalifa, Dubai 7. Sydney Opera House
122 GEOGRAPHY GENIUS
skylines
Nest, was built for the
Olympics in 2008.
2 Surrounded by majestic churches and cathedrals, the Eiffel Tower is the dominant
3 Sitting on the banks of the River Thames, one of the world’s 4 This European capital was divided by a wall, between
oldest cities is home to a large parliament building, where the east and west, from 1961 until 1989 when it was torn
nation’s politicians meet. down to unite the city and the country.
5 This Asian capital city has many preserved historical buildings, 6 At 800,000 sq ft (74,322 sq m) Red Square is huge, and lies at
including religious shrines, temples, tombs, and gardens. the heart of this city, acting as both a political and cultural center.
123
STARTER
Rome, Italy
London, UK
Dubai, UAE
Berlin, Germany
CHALLENGER
7 An eye-catching skyline of high-rise buildings sits against the backdrop of the
Namsan mountain in this capital, which also includes historic sites such as palaces. Beijing, China
Moscow, Russia
Built at a site where two
Standing 88 stories high, rivers join, the Jamek
the Petronas Towers are the mosque is the city’s
world’s tallest twin structures. oldest mosque.
Tokyo, Japan
Seoul, South Korea
GENIUS!
Delhi, India
Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia
9 The office buildings constructed in the 19th and 20th centuries 10 Construction on a rapid scale has produced this modern
turned this coastal city into a high-rise hub, with nicknames ranging high-rise city, known for its luxury hotels and shopping centers.
from the “Big Apple” to “The City that Never Sleeps.”
11 Once the heart of a large empire, this ancient city boasts many 12 Earthquakes prove a problem in this large city, so the skyline
ruins and relics, as well as churches full of classical art. spreads outward rather than upward.
8. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 9. New York, USA 10. Dubai, UAE 11. Rome, Italy 12. Tokyo, Japan
ANSWERS: 1. Beijing, China 2. Paris, France 3. London, UK 4. Berlin, Germany 5. Delhi, India 6. Moscow, Russia 7. Seoul, South Korea
124
1 Canada’s government
building—Parliament Hill—is
located in one of the coldest
Capital
capitals in the world, where
temperatures can reach
–3°F (–16°C) on
1 average in winter.
cities
Pack your bags because you’re off on
a round-the-world trip! Whether it is
the center of government, or a hub of 3
capital cities has its own unique history 3 Cuba’s colorful capital is home to
classic cars, bright buildings, and the
and identity. 4 sounds of traditional salsa music.
6
5 Peru’s coastal capital was founded
by the Spanish explorer Francisco
Pizarro in 1535 and today is one of
the largest cities in South America.
Famed for its
modernist
TEST YOURSELF 7 architecture, this
young city was only
STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS! established in 1960.
Divided in two
by a famous
wall until
1989, Germany’s
capital city
has played an
important part in The heart of modern-day Russia holds
European history. 8 lots of beautiful palaces and cathedrals,
10
many found inside its central fortress
known as the Kremlin.
9
19 The iconic
Petronas Towers
are just one of the
14 Full of fascinating historical wonders, impressive skyscrapers
including the pyramids, Egypt’s capital found in this busy
city lies on the Nile River. Malaysian city.
14. Cairo 15. Abu Dhabi 16. Kabul 17. Dhaka 18. Bangkok 19. Kuala Lumpur 20. Tokyo 21. Abuja 22. Kinshasa 23. Nairobi 24. Antananarivo 25. Canberra
ANSWERS: 1. Ottawa 2. Mexico City 3. Havana 4. San José 5. Lima 6. Brasília 7. Buenos Aires 8. Stockholm 9. Berlin 10. Moscow 11. Bucharest 12. Madrid 13. Ankara
126 GEOGRAPHY GENIUS
Some show natural features such as rivers, while others show great
cities and other structures created by humans.
7. Nile Delta 8. San Andreas Fault 9. Manhattan Island, New York 10. Ganges Delta 11. Pyramids of Giza 12. Great Barrier Reef
ANSWERS: 1. The Grand Canyon 2. Olympus Mons, Mars 3. Forbidden City 4. Italy 5. Himalayas 6. Niagara Falls
127
A well-known
statue of a woman
holding a flaming
torch stands on
this smaller island.
9 This
famous island,
part of a big US city,
8 Running has a large green park,
through surrounded by skyscrapers.
California, this
800-mile- (1,300-
km-) long fracture
divides Earth’s two
biggest tectonic plates. 10 One of the largest rivers
in Asia flows into the Bay
of Bengal, splitting into
many channels lined with
mangrove swamps.
TEST YOURSELF
STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
How to plant a
Staff Charge
The flag pole a flag An emblem on the flag.
hangs from.
flag on the Moon
The first flag to fly on the Moon was a US flag
Fly bought for just $5.50. It was placed inside an
The part of aluminum tube and flown to the Moon
the flag
farthest from on board the Apollo 11 spacecraft in 1969.
the staff.
Field
The basic
background
color of
Hoist the flag.
The part of the flag closest to the staff.
Parts of a f lag
Flags come in a great variety of colors, patterns, and
designs, but they all share the same features and parts.
Flags
Flags developed out of the coat of arms
that armies carried into battle. Some
countries have used the same flag design
for centuries while others have changed
their look. Afghanistan, for instance, has
had more than 20 different flags in the
past 150 years!
01.
I don’t
There’s no
wind on the Moon to
fly a flag. Get engineers
believe it to place a wire into a
hem sewn into the top
The 27 stars on Brazil’s flag show the of the flag so it will stick
22,152 sq ft pattern in the night sky above the city out straight.
In numbers
Nepa
In many countries it’s against
Flag laws
l’s
the law to damage or destroy
fag
the national flag. In France, for
Flag study example, the punishment is up
ides.
is the
to six months in prison, while
Vexillology is the name given to
the study of flags. It comes from in Israel the punishment can
ur s
the latin word vexillum, meaning be up to three years in prison.
on
“flag.” Vexillologists even have
fo
ly
their own flag (above). In Denmark it is against
an
ti
na h the law to destroy the flags
on
al ret of other countries but not Denmark’s
fag o
that has m
own national flag.
with a national flag that does not Finland is washed, it can only
feature the colors red, white, or blue. be dried indoors.
1 A sun with
32 rays adorns
the flag of South 3 This
America’s second- mountainous
biggest country. 2 Traditional carpet weaving European
patterns are part of this former nation is one of
Soviet republic’s flag. the few to fly a
square flag.
Raise
three flags into one.
nation’s people.
16 Formed by
STARTER
which Nelson Mandela became its president. South Africa
17 All the official
China
flags of this nation
Brazil
are made of khadi—
a cloth popularized by France
Mahatma Gandhi. Greece
Australia
Argentina
Russian Federation
CHALLENGER
Nigeria
Turkey
18 The flag of the world’s
Mexico
19 This country, which India
biggest country and hosts
the Amazon river flows Germany
of the 2018 FIFA World Cup.
through, has the words Italy
“Order and Progress”
on its flag.
Liberia
Kenya
Bhutan
Turkmenistan
GENIUS!
South Korea
Papua New Guinea
Saudi Arabia
22 The world’s best-known long- Swaziland
21 The circular symbol at the distance cycling race has been Peru
center of this Asian nation’s flag hosted by this nation since 1903.
means balance in the universe.
27 A crossroads
i
ll io
Weather
nl
All the weather we experience occurs in the
troposphere, the lowest level of Earth’s atmosphere.
Temperature, air pressure, wind speed, humidity,
Everlasting storm and the sun all affect our weather. Around
A unique series of storm clouds
develops over Lake Maracaibo, the world the weather varies along with the
ightning strik
Venezuela, almost every night, changing landscape, from cold, snowcapped
es
generating dramatic
a
thunderstorms. ye mountains to humid, tropical rainforests.
ar
Some tornadoes can be
.
around 21⁄2 miles (4 km) wide!
Extreme weather
Ice storms occur when rain Cloudy
or water spray
Sunny Sunny
freeze onto very cold intervals
objects, turning
buildings into ice
Tropical Light rain
statues—like this storm
lighthouse on
Lake Michigan.
In numbers
6 ft
(1.825 m) The amount of
rain that fell on the Indian 04. The fast,
Ocean island of Réunion strong, swirling
in 24 hours in 1966. tornado destroys
anything in its path,
leaving a trail of
1 devastation behind.
The number of lightning
flashes needed to create
enough electricity to
Moonbow: When moonlight Firewhirl: If raging fires on the Dust storm: Strong winds Volcanic lightning: This Giant hailstones: Hailstones
Strange weather
shines through water droplets, ground meet powerful winds, blowing over dusty landscapes occurs when an erupting form from ice crystals blown
the reflection can make a flames can shoot up into the air in can produce huge banks of volcano generates an around in thunderclouds—
faint moonbow in the sky. a dangerous display of firewhirls. sand and dust. electric storm. some are bigger than golf balls.
1 These very high-flying TEST YOURSELF
clouds form wispy trails
of ice crystals. Cirrus
Cumulonimbus
Stratus
Cumulus
STARTER
2 Blue sky can be seen
Lenticular
Cloud watching Mammatus
Those fluffy clouds in the sky may look like floating Altocumulus
cotton, but they are actually made of tiny water Altostratus
GENIUS!
4 This fluffy
mid-altitude cloud
can form beautiful
patterns in the sky.
6 These odd-looking
8 This low-level
Rock types
e ni
te Rocks and
minerals
Sy
sediment layers
( 2.3 million) The price of builds, it squashes the
Sediment begins
a single carat (1⁄14 oz/0.2 g) particles down and
to settle as it
they stick together, a
of jadeite, a rare kind of reaches the sea.
process called
jade and the world’s most cementation.
expensive mineral today.
75 percent
The amount of Earth’s
land surface covered
by sedimentary rock.
Below this layer lies
mainly igneous and
02.
metamorphic rock.
Sediment
73 tons is washed down rivers
and settles to form
Weight of the largest layers of sedimentary
meteorite to strike Earth. rock under the sea.
These stony or metallic
rocks enter Earth’s
atmosphere from space!
137
Everyday minerals
Minerals: A mineral is
made up of one chemical
combination—this quartz is
a mix of silicon and oxygen—
and is identified by the shape
of its crystals.
Chalk Talc Toothpaste
Chalcite, the mineral This mineral Minerals can be
in chalk, crumbles crumbles into useful in toothpaste
Feldspar comes Hexagonal crystals
in a variety of
and sticks to powder that soaks up because their rough
different colors. surfaces. It is good moisture, helping to textures help to
for writing on keep skin dry. clean or polish teeth.
blackboards.
Rocks: A rock is a
mixture of different
minerals. This granite
contains feldspar
(pink), quartz I don’t believe it
(gray), and Zircon, the oldest-known mineral
mica (black). crystal, formed 4.4 billion years ago,
just after the formation of planet Earth.
Glassy obsidian
forms when
lava cools very
quickly. Its edges are
so sharp they are used
in surgical scalpels.
In 2000, a cave
in Mexico was
discovered to be full of
03. Squeezing and heating
underground, caused by activity inside
gypsum crystals up to
36 ft (11 m) long!
Earth, change sedimentary and igneous
rocks into metamorphic rocks.
138 GEOGRAPHY GENIUS
Rock stars
3 The metallic
7 This rock is
made up of tiny
6 Here is a mineral that marine shells and
you shouldn’t play around can sometimes
with—it’s deadly poisonous. contain bigger
fossils as well.
11 A pure
form of carbon,
this soft, greasy
mineral is known
for making pencil
marks on paper.
11. Graphite 12. Agate 13. Cinnabar 14. Marble 15. Gold 16. Halite 17. Obsidian 18. Meteorite 19. Sulfur 20. Malachite 21. Sandstone
ANSWERS: 1. Hematite 2. Bauxite 3. Pyrite 4. Platinum 5. Chalk 6. Arsenic 7. Limestone 8. Granite 9. Rose quartz 10. Flint
139
16 If you think
STARTER
Sandstone
Graphite
Gold
The crystals can Marble
grow up to 2 in
(4 cm) long.
19 This bright-yellow
Meteorite
Rose quartz
20 The presence of copper
Limestone
in rocks and minerals can make
them look green—as seen in this Platinum
strikingly colored mineral. Arsenic
Halite
21 If you look carefully, Malachite
this rock is made up Obsidian
GENIUS!
2 No other gemstone
has the striking black
and white banding
pattern of this one.
4 The name of
This heart-shaped
gem is surrounded
by 29 smaller gems. Some minerals form crystals that can be cut
and polished into stunning gems, making them
popular in jewelry. Many are highly valuable
and a few even cost millions—do you have an
5 The name of
eye for quality?
this stone comes
from the Latin
for “seed”—
possibly inspired
by pomegranate
seeds, which are
similar in shape
and color.
11. Emerald 12. Topaz 13. Jasper 14. Ruby 15. Moonstone 16. Jet 17. Malachite 18. Turquoise 19. Tiger’s eye 20. Pearl 21. Opal
ANSWERS: 1. Amethyst 2. Onyx 3. Tourmaline 4. Aquamarine 5. Garnet 6. Lapis lazuli 7. Peridot 8. Diamond 9. Amber 10. Sapphire
141
18 Lacking the
sparkle of other
gemstones, this
one makes up
for it with its
distinctive blue
shade and
veined pattern.
19 Different minerals
give this polished gem
a deep red-brown
color—like the fiery
gaze of a big cat.
20 When an oyster is irritated by a
TEST YOURSELF
STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
5000–2350 bce 3300–1300 bce 3300–30 bce 3100–1800 bce 1600–146 bce
01.
civilizations
Recruit an army of thousands of
laborers—building an ancient Egyptian
royal tomb is a monumental task.
13,170 miles
year is named
after one of 12
animal signs— (21,196 km) Length of the
Theater comes
Ancient theater
e.”
Top tombs
The ancient Romans United by the First The Maya built A curse was said to bring
built an empire Emperor, China cities with pyramid death to anyone who
that included all the remained under temples and palaces entered the tomb of the Egyptian
lands around the imperial rule for more in the jungles of king Tutankhamun.
Mediterranean. than 2,000 years. Central America.
Tomb of the
dead king with
his treasures
The stone
blocks are
hauled up a
ramp beside
the pyramid. I don’t believe it
The Incas of Peru had no writing, but they
kept records with lengths of knotted
string of different colors.
Temple types
Mayan: The Mayans Greek: Stone Egyptian: To enter Hindu: The outside Roman: The Romans
built temples shaped columns were typical an Egyptian temple, walls of Hindu temples copied Greek temples,
like steep pyramids, of Greek temples. you had to pass were richly decorated but built them with brick
with steps leading to A statue of a god through gateways with carvings. and concrete instead
a room on top. stood inside. called pylons. of stone.
146 HISTORY BUFF
Lost cities
Over the centuries, civilizations have risen and fallen
from power, their abandoned cities forgotten, buried
by desert sands or overgrown by forests. Can you identify
these ancient sites from around the world, rediscovered
by explorers and archaeologists?
5 A soapstone bird statue found in the
4 When the Incas ruins of this medieval city features on the
abandoned this flag of a modern African country.
sacred site high
in the Andes
mountains in 1572,
it remained hidden
from the outside
world until 1911.
About 200
buildings make
up the site.
7 This temple city in Cambodia, built in the 8 When the volcano Vesuvius erupted in
12th century, is one of the largest religious Italy in 79 ce, it completely buried this
monuments in the world. Roman town in thick ash.
8. Pompeii 9. Thebes 10. Roman Forum 11. Chichen Itza 12. Gaochang 13. Bagan 14. Persepolis 15. Petra
ANSWERS: 1. Ephesus 2. Teotihuacan 3. Chan Chan 4. Machu Picchu 5. Great Zimbabwe 6. Hampi 7. Angkor Wat
147
TEST YOURSELF
STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
the gods
underworld, guarded
by the three-headed 2 This goddess
dog Cerberus. was taken by the
king of the dead
to be his queen.
The ancient Romans worshipped many gods.
They built temples where they sacrificed animals
to honor them. Each one ruled over a different
area of life—from marriage and love, to war and
fire. Can you recognize the gods in this gallery?
trident—a fishing
spear with three
prongs—this god
ruled the sea.
4 The messenger
of the gods was a
speedy traveler, aided
by his winged helmet.
5 A two-
faced god of
beginnings,
this one gave
his name to
the first month
of the year.
6 The goddess
of wisdom, crafts,
and war is usually
shown wearing a
helmet and armed
with a spear.
149
comes from the name of this after the queen of the gods and the goddess TEST YOURSELF
god of fire and metalworkers. of marriage, who is shown here wearing her
royal headband called a diadem. Diana
Usually shown holding
a blacksmith’s hammer, Juno
STARTER
this god forged armor Jupiter
for heroes and gods.
Mars
9 Armed with
Venus
thunderbolts, the
king of the gods
ruled over the sky.
Apollo
CHALLENGER
10 A drinking cup and
Cupid
a bunch of grapes
help identify the god Janus
of agriculture, wine, Mercury
11 The and fertility. Neptune
brightest
planet in the
night sky is
Bacchus
named after
this goddess Minerva
GENIUS!
of love Pluto
and beauty. Proserpina
Vulcan
12 Armed
with arrows,
this is the
goddess of
the hunt.
13 Shown as
a young man
without a beard,
the god of light, 15 Ready for battle and
healing, and music wearing a warrior’s helmet,
carries a lyre. this fiery god of war gave
14 The god of desire fired his name to the red planet
arrows to make people in our solar system.
fall in love.
8. Juno 9. Jupiter 10. Bacchus 11. Venus 12. Diana 13. Apollo 14. Cupid 15. Mars
ANSWERS: 1. Pluto 2. Proserpina 3. Neptune 4. Mercury 5. Janus 6. Minerva 7. Vulcan
150 HISTORY BUFF
Mythical creatures
Myths and legends are timeless tales, exploring the mysteries 2 In Greek myths, this
creature, part lion and
of nature and the big questions of life. These stories feature part eagle, guarded
gods, heroes, demons, and monsters, who often have golden treasures
magical powers. and was known
for its strength.
3 In the
Middle Ages,
Europeans told
stories of horses
with horns, living
in remote forests.
The dragon also
has the feet of
a cockerel.
7 The Greek sea god’s chariot
was pulled by this creature—
6 Across Europe and Asia,
The body is half horse and half fish.
there are stories of women covered with
5 Myths of with the tails of fish. thick hair.
humans with
the ability to turn into
wolves have been told 8 This tall, hairy,
across Europe. ape-like beast is said
to live in the Himalayan
mountains of Asia.
9 A beast, with
the body of a man
and the head of a
bull, was hidden in
a labyrinth by King
Minos of Crete.
13. Chinese dragon 14. Manticore 15. Centaur 16. Cyclops 17. Kappa 18. Faun
7. Hippocampus 8. Yeti 9. Minotaur 10. Anansi 11. Phoenix 12. Thunderbird
ANSWERS: 1. Chimera 2. Griffin 3. Unicorn 4. Cockatrice 5. Werewolf 6. Mermaid
151
STARTER
in the myths of Phoenix
North American Unicorn
people. Werewolf
Yeti
Centaur
CHALLENGER
Cyclops
Faun
Griffin
Minotaur
Thunderbird
Anansi
Chimera
GENIUS!
Cockatrice
Eagle claws are Hippocampus
on the feet. Kappa
13 In East Asia, this creature
Manticore
with a snake-like body
14This Persian creature and four legs is thought
has a lion’s body, a to bring good luck.
human face, and
a tail that shoots
deadly spines.
17 Japan’s ponds
18 Ancient Roman
myths often tell
of wild men with
the legs and horns
of goats.
152 HISTORY BUFF
Castles
Battlements
The jagged tops of the castle
walls allowed defenders to
shoot arrows as well as hide
from enemy fire during battle.
Types of castle
Drawbridge
The only entrance
Bailey was a wooden bridge,
Motte which could be raised
to keep enemies out.
Castle
defenses
To capture this castle, attackers
would have to cross a moat and
Motte and Bailey: This type
of castle, built during the 11th and then break through two walls.
12th centuries, had a courtyard All the while, defenders would
(bailey) protected by a wall and be shooting arrows at them from
a tall, steep mound (motte). the battlements and towers above.
Moat
A large water-filled ditch
surrounded the castle,
Castle careers
Corner towers entertained guests at castle feasts.
Round towers at the corners Often wearing brightly colored clothes, they
allowed defenders to look told jokes and played tricks, and were even
out in all directions.
allowed to poke fun at the lords and ladies.
The lady-in-waiting
was a high-ranking
attendant, acting as a
companion to a queen or
noblewoman. She helped her
mistress dress
and sat with
her, usually
doing
embroidery,
reading, or
playing music.
Castles were strongholds, Forts were built for defensive Palaces, such as England’s
built both for defense and and military purposes, not Buckingham Palace, were
as a residence. They came for permanent residence. designed for luxury and
in all shapes and sizes—this Mehrangarh is one of India’s comfort—not to withstand
is Himeji castle in Japan. largest forts. military attacks.
154 HISTORY BUFF
Hold
the fort 2 Built by King Louis XIV,
4 Chinese
emperors once
Painting shows relaxed in this
St. George slaying palace in Beijing,
a dragon. known for its
wonderful gardens,
lakes, pavilions,
temples, and
pagodas.
5 Medieval
knights from
Europe built
this castle as a
stronghold in
Syria during
the Crusades.
155
STARTER
largest in the world that is still Windsor Castle
lived in as a home—by the Neuschwanstein
British royal family! Castle
Bran Castle
CHALLENGER
Summer Palace
Red Fort
Grand Palace
of Bangkok
Citadel of Qaitbay
Krak de Chevaliers
GENIUS!
Topkapi Palace
Winter Palace
in St. Petersburg,
Russia, has 1,057
rooms and was
once the home of the
Russian royal family.
11With its
distinctive
sandstone walls,
this fort in Delhi,
India, was lived in
by the country’s
Mughal emperors.
12 Kings began
7. Windsor Castle 8. Topkapi Palace 9. Bran Castle 10. Winter Palace 11. Red Fort 12. Grand Palace of Bangkok
ANSWERS: 1. Neuschwanstein Castle 2. Palace of Versailles 3. Alhambra 4. Summer Palace 5. Krak de Chevaliers 6. Citadel of Qaitbay
5 South Africa’s Zulu warriors 9 A medieval knight
carried these long cowhide needed two hands
shields for protection in to wield this long,
close combat. slashing sword.
7 European
medieval knights
swung this weapon in
4 Japanese warriors,
the air at their enemies.
called samurai, used
these weapons—
the sharpest steel
swords ever made.
Battle
ready!
Warfare has been a part of history for thousands
of years, and weapons have come in a wide range
of forms. They have been wielded by warriors in
many types of combat—from battles and sieges,
to wars and duels—and were used to both
defend and attack.
157
STARTER
were used by Saber
Roman legionaries Flail
and could be put
Longsword
together to form
a shield wall. This formation Scutum
is called
the tortoise.
19 New Zealand’s
Maori warriors fought
hand-to-hand with Qin crossbow
beautifully Mace
carved clubs,
CHALLENGER
Dhal
made from wood Dory
or whale bone.
Gladius
Hoplon
Bird-headed
throwing knife
Trigger
Macuahuitl
Isihlangu
Halberd
GENIUS!
13. Hoplon 14. Bird-headed throwing knife 15. Saber 16. Halberd 17. Viking battle-ax 18. Dhal 19. Wahaika 20. Qin crossbow 21. Scutum
ANSWERS: 1. Longbow 2. Gladius 3. Macuahuitl 4. Katana 5. Isihlangu 6. Mace 7. Flail 8. Cutlass 9. Longsword 10. Dory 11. Flamberge 12. Scimitar
158 HISTORY BUFF
Fighting
1 Warriors in the Middle
East wore this helmet in
the 16th century. It is
fashion
decorated with inscriptions
from the Quran, the
Islamic religious text.
Elongated
neck guard
5 Foot soldiers of an
ancient empire wore
helmets such as this
one, which was
designed
to protect the
head without
blocking
vision or
hearing. 6 Expensive 7 Named after a city-state
Face guard to
protect nose
and eyes
TEST YOURSELF
Triangular chain Viking helmet
mail covered
the face Roman Legionary
STARTER
helmet
Samurai helmet
Pierced holes
for breathing Lobster-tail pot helmet
Turkish helmet
CHALLENGER
Anglo-Saxon helmet
11 From the 1220s Chinese helmet
to 1350, European Great helm
knights protected Corinthian helmet
their heads with
big bucket-
shaped helmets.
12 Made of leather,
with a tall feather Mughal helmet
plume, this helmet was British cavalry helmet
GENIUS! Morion
worn by soldiers on
horses during the Armet
Napoleonic wars in the Prussian helmet
early 19th century.
Decoration
representing
stag antlers
49
Leaders
In numbers
The number of countries
ruled by a dictatorship.
women
scepter
as an abbey or cathedral.
Around the world, women
had to fight for the right to
vote—known as suffrage.
The first country to give women the vote
03. Be dignified
and calm during the
was New Zealand in 1893. One of the ceremony. The most
fiercest struggles was in Britain, where solemn moment is when
suffragettes led by Emmeline Pankhurst holy oil is dabbed on
your forehead.
(left in 1914) were often arrested when
they protested. British women got the
vote in 1918.
Elizabeth I of
England wore
golden robes
Who’s in charge?
for her
coronation.
e
Forms of govern Monarch: Although som
ment countries still have kin gs
dern role is
and queens, their mo
Democracy head of state.
often ceremonial, as
The word democ
racy means “rule
In modern democ by people.” President: Countries
racies, citizens vo often
representatives—o te to elect without a monarchy
fficials who make ir head of
on their behalf. Re
presentatives inclu
decisions have a president as the
ts have real
members of Parli
ament and US se
de British state. Some presiden
nators. onial role.
power, others a cerem
Dictatorship
Prime minister:
A dictatorship is
rule by a single lea
der who In countries with a
has seized power or president,
, backed by militar ceremonial monarch
Dictators ban all y force.
ent is a
strictly control th
political opposition
. They the head of the governm
e press so that th prime minister.
never read any cr e people
iticism of them.
Revolutions!
Sticky ends!
I don’t believe it
Around 35 Roman
emperors were
Shot in a duel, American president murdered by their
Andrew Jackson (1829–1837) lived fellow Romans.
for another 40 years with the bullet
still in his chest. In 1460, King James II
of Scotland stood too
near a cannon and was
killed when it exploded.
04.
In 1918, Nicholas II, last
Sit on a throne wearing a jeweled czar of Russia, with his
crown and holding royal regalia, such as wife and five children, was
an orb and scepter. You are now a queen. executed by revolutionaries.
Swear an oath to uphold the law.
In 1793, in France, King
Louis XVI and Queen
Marie-Antoinette
had their heads
chopped off by
a guillotine.
English kings
and queens are
presented with a
jeweled sphere
called an orb,
representing
the globe.
Voting matters
In a democratic election,
voters mark their chosen
candidate, and the winner is the
one with the most votes!
162 HISTORY BUFF
Famous faces
While many famous world leaders in history were
warriors who conquered great empires, others led
political movements or triggered revolutions. Some
used force, others used peaceful methods, but all of
them made a big impact on the world.
3 Ancient Egypt’s
last pharaoh was a
famous queen who
killed herself—possibly
by allowing a snake
to bite her—after
being defeated in a
war against Rome.
This famous
portrait shows
the general
crossing
the Alps to
conquer Austria.
10 This revolutionary
leader founded the
People’s Republic of
China in 1949, which he
ruled for 27 years.
TEST YOURSELF
11 This Argentinian leader
of the 1950s Cuban George Washington
Revolution is now a famous Mahatma Gandhi
STARTER
Napoleon Bonaparte
Julius Caesar
Alexander the Great
Genghis Khan
Mao Zedong
GENIUS!
Nelson Mandela
12 A pastor and civil rights leader, this man Che Guevara
led a nonviolent campaign for equal rights for
African-Americans in the 1950s and 1960s.
This famous war horse
was called Marengo.
7. Napoleon Bonaparte 8. Mahatma Gandhi 9. Nelson Mandela 10. Mao Zedong 11. Che Guevara 12. Martin Luther King, Jr.
ANSWERS: 1. Alexander the Great 2. Julius Caesar 3. Cleopatra 4. Genghis Khan 5. George Washington 6. Catherine the Great
VULTURE
CULTURE
5
Picture puzzle
Making a masterpiece is a great art, but
some artists have even packed puzzles into
their paintings as well. Can you see the skull
hidden in this picture by Renaissance artist
Hans Holbein the Younger?
166 CULTURE VULTURE
In numbers
The age in years of the paintings
earliest cave paintings
found in Chauvet, Portrait
France, showing
Traditionally art was drawing, painting, animals being hunted.
Individual people are the
subject of portraits. The style
and sculpture. Today, anything goes can be realistic or abstract.
and the artist’s imagination is the only 4
The number of years
limit. What some may regard as weird, it took Italian artist
others see as wonderful—take a look Michelangelo (1475–
1564) to paint the
and see which styles of art inspire you. ceiling and upper walls
of the Sistine Chapel
in Rome.
03.
rocks, charcoal, or
plants and to After a
prepare canvasses. number of years,
become an assistant
to a master painter
you admire. Help
him with his work
until you are as
good as he is.
I don’t
believe it
Salvator Mundi by Leonardo
da Vinci (1452–1519) is
the world’s most expensive
painting. It sold for $450 Purple was produced
million (£346 million) in 2017. using the mucus of
sea snails.
168 CULTURE VULTURE
Gallery of
the greats
Every age has its great artists, the “masters” with unique skills
who create new styles, use clever techniques, and inspire
others. Here is a gallery of famous paintings by some of the
great masters—do you know what they are called?
4 Japanese artist
Katsushika Hokusai’s
woodblock print is so 5 The self-taught French artist Henri
dramatic, you almost feel Rousseau painted wild animals in jungle
seasick! Can you spot Mount scenes based on visits to the Botanical
Fuji in the background? Gardens in Paris, France.
169
TEST YOURSELF
Tiger in a Tropical
Storm
STARTER
St. George and
the Dragon
Mona Lisa
The Great Wave
off Kanagawa
CHALLENGER
Green Mountains
and White Clouds
8 The swirling sky by Dutch artist Vincent Water Lilies
van Gogh has a distinctive style, created The Scream
using thick oil paint with fat brushes, or
squeezed straight from the tube.
GENIUS!
Weeping Woman
The Star
The Night Watch
loved these flowers in his garden so much Johannes Vermeer glows with light,
he painted them about 250 times. bringing out the detail of his subject.
7. The Scream 8. The Starry Night 9. The Star 10. Green Mountains and White Clouds 11. Water Lilies 12. Girl with a Pearl Earring
ANSWERS: 1. The Night Watch 2. Mona Lisa 3. Weeping Woman 4. The Great Wave off Kanagawa 5. Tiger in a Tropical Storm 6. St. George and the Dragon
1 This triangular 3 First developed
instrument has 2 This large in the 1500s,
47 strings— percussion instrument this instrument
the shorter the makes a deep boom is played
string the higher when struck with a by drawing
the note. soft-headed stick. a wooden
bow, strung
with horsehair,
across strings.
Chin rest
7 Usually
made of metal,
this woodwind
instrument is
held horizontally
and played by
blowing air over
a hole at one end.
6 Wooden bars are laid out
like a keyboard and struck with a
mallet. The hollow tubes below pick up
the vibrations and amplify the sound.
Slide
9 Also known
as a kettle drum,
this instrument is TEST YOURSELF
played by striking the
membrane (skin) with STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
wool-topped sticks.
Violin Cello Oboe
Flute Tuba Bassoon
Pedal can loosen Saxophone Trombone Bass drum
or tighten the
skin, producing Trumpet Clarinet Snare drum
different pitches Cymbals Xylophone Timpani
Harp Vibraphone
171
Playing
the classics
In a classical orchestra, there are many kinds
of instruments, played in different ways.
Valves are
These instruments are usually grouped in pressed to
four sections—percussion, brass, change notes
Mouthpiece
10 Invented
in 1840, this
brass woodwind Mouthpiece
is made of
instrument two pieces
became a of wood
popular feature strapped
in jazz and together
swing bands.
13 This woodwind
instrument is
made of a long
tube, folded
back on itself.
12 Usually played sitting
down, this large, heavy
brass instrument has
11 This a bellowing sound. 14 Striking these
woodwind metal plates
instrument is together makes a
about 251⁄2 in crashing sound.
(65 cm) long.
Metal bars
9. Timpani 10. Saxophone 11. Oboe 12. Tuba 13. Bassoon 14. Cymbals 15. Snare drum 16. Cello 17. Vibraphone
ANSWERS: 1. Harp 2. Bass drum 3. Violin 4. Trumpet 5. Clarinet 6. Xylophone 7. Flute 8. Trombone
172
Blowpipe
Barrel-like
shape
Keys alter
Making
the sound. 6In India and other
parts of South Asia,
musicians beat both
ends of this drum.
7 This
instrument
is nicknamed
music
a squeeze-box Folk music is a form of traditional music created,
because bellows are
pulled and squeezed
and passed on, by ordinary people rather than
to make air vibrate the professional composers. Around the world, folk
metal strips inside.
Bellows musicians play many different, unusual, and wonderful
instruments, some very old in origin. Can you identify
8 This cheap tin whistle, these instruments?
popular in Ireland and Scotland,
is named after a British coin.
9 Popular in Korea,
this bamboo flute
makes a buzzing
sound when played.
10. Didgeridoo 11. Steelpan 12. Harmonica 13. Ocarina 14. Ukulele 15. Erhu 16. Maracas 17. Tanpura 18. Hurdy-gurdy
ANSWERS: 1. Djembe 2. Balalaika 3. Banjo 4. Panpipes 5. Bagpipes 6. Dhol 7. Accordion 8. Penny whistle 9. Daegeum
173
12 Invented in
Europe in the
early 19th century,
this instrument is
played by blowing
and sucking air.
Mouthpiece
15 This Chinese
A horse- two-stringed
hair bow is
drawn over instrument has a
13 For thousands of years, people the strings. sound box at the
have played instruments like this, bottom, which is
blowing through the mouthpiece covered with
and covering the holes to create python skin.
different sounds.
Carved
decoration 14 The name of
this small stringed Sound box
instrument, from Hawaii,
means “jumping flea.”
TEST YOURSELF
Three strings are
made from steel,
Accordion
and the fourth Bagpipes
STARTER
one is made Ukulele
from brass.
16 These Latin American Harmonica
rattles are often Banjo
made from dried Maracas
17 Indian folk and
gourds or wood,
filled with beans classical musicians
or pebbles. pluck the strings of this
long-necked instrument. Balalaika
CHALLENGER
Didgeridoo
Panel protects wheel Hurdy-gurdy
18 This European
Panpipes
instrument is played by Steelpan
turning a handle, which Penny whistle
makes a wheel rub against
strings, creating music!
Handle Daegeum
Dhol
GENIUS!
Djembe
Erhu
Ocarina
Tanpura
This instrument can sometimes
be up to 10 ft (3 m) long.
Languages
Hieroglyphs
These Egyptian
picture symbols
were a mystery
for 1,428 years.
Dead languages
Some languages are not used
anymore. When conquered by the
Romans, the Etruscans switched
to Latin and their language
died out.
Demotic
An everyday
Egyptian script
sat between
the two other
writing systems
on the stone.
Say it in pictures
People are again using pictures
in communication, to get across
their emotions. Emoticons are typed
Japan United Kingdom US on a keyboard, for example :) is
a smiling face, while emojis (above)
are actual images that can be
Mandarin 4,445 million people speak
Around 909 million people speak the other first languages.
inserted into a message.
world’s most popular first language.
World
languages
Although there are 7,097
languages spoken today,
most of the world uses only
a small number of them.
Mandarin is the most
popular first language,
but if you count how
many people speak
additional languages
(called second languages),
then English would be
the most widely spoken.
Chinese Spanish English Arabic Hindi Bengali Portuguese Russian Japanese Punjabi
12% 6% 5% 4.1% 3.4% 3.2% 2.9% 2% 1.7% 1.2%
Some languages were invented just for
Fictional languages
characters in films and books.
Klingon: In the Star Trek Na’vi: Na’vi is another Lapine: The rabbits in Quenya: British author
movies, the alien Klingons invented language, spoken Richard Adams’ novel J.R.R. Tolkien created many
have their own language. by the aliens in the 2009 Watership Down speak languages for the elves in
They greet with “nuqneH!” film Avatar. It contains English mixed with a rabbit The Lord of the Rings. Only
meaning “what do you want?” more than 2,200 words. language, called Lapine. Quenya is used in the films.
176 CULTURE VULTURE
en
ost spok
d ’s s econd m
dn use
rl n
s.“
1 The w o th a chow
by more
e is used in 21 countries.
es
languag a-lo-ha nd
try,
on peop
le isla kin
400 milli n
un
a d
Oce an 3
co
2
People on the Pacific “love I
frie n a Sou e a n ll o
this greeting, which mean s thern Euro p
nds he
use th ay
is word to s
and goodbye.
This language
is written from
right to left.
oh-lah
Ea o spoken
sia.
oh-lah
st A
mar-ha-ban
als
is
ge
5
Thi
ua , an
d
4 Th
is language wa s we g
s first used by in p s tern European lan a 6The religious te
on a European people living arts fric xt of Islam, the
most widely sp
island and now
it is one of the of South America, A Quran, is written
in this language
oken language This greeting m .
s in the world. eans “welcome.
Greetings!
”
n ee in
T
co
t
7
bohn-zhoo nuh-muh-sta
r y
8People in So
utheast Asia
fold their ha often
nds and bo
in a Sout w when usin
ting is this greetin g
g ree d in the co heast A g. It means
“I bow to yo
is se un s u.”
Th ge, u nmar and try tha ian
9
u a M ya Cam ts
ng e n bo its
la twe dia
e .
b
mer-ha-ba
sa-wa
s-dee 10
T
by his gre
eig eting
ht c is used i red
ount n a nation borde .
ries, in
cluding Greece and I n
ra
11. Greek 12. Polish 13. Russian 14. Mandarin 15. German 16. Korean 17. Japanese 18. Latin 19. Swedish
ANSWERS: 1. Spanish 2. Hawaiian 3. Italian 4. English 5. Portuguese 6. Arabic 7. French 8. Hindi 9. Thai 10. Turkish
177
rn European gre
aste e
h is e as originally used ting,
T r,” w to
12
no sh me
o ow
“h
an resp
ing ect.
kee-air-a
i- tay
11
Meaning
used in a “be glad
,” this lan
a long his
Mediterr
anean co guage
chesh-ch
tory—at le untry, ha
ast 3,400 s
years.
zdras-tvu-ty
eh
13
This
l he
wo anguag t ry in t
rld, e is sp
stret oken in the biggest coun sia.
ching A
from Eastern Europe across
ann-yeon
g
s used by pe
ting i o
g ree , which lies be ple liv
ry twe
e
Th coun
t en ing
nee-how
16 The inhab
Fra in
n Asian pen itants of an East
15
nc
insula, div
a
ided into
pe
two coun
lar d Po
e
A billion East As
an
t each oth
ge
14 in this lan er
t ea ch other in guage.
ee
this word to gr ge.
t spoken langua
the world’s mos
land.
ha-lo
w
sal-wa
18 y
sp The la b
e
kon-ni ot
-c hi-wa
oke n
n to guage of m ay n rms.
One of three different day, ancient Rome te
17 but is tifc
A
m e n Ea s
scripts used to still used for scien
write this language
an s tA . It
“tod sian islan i ng
ay,” d-nation uses this greet ay?”
and i d
s short for “How are you to TEST YOURSELF
STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
19
This is one
of Hawaiian Russian Thai
the languag Italian German Turkish
es of
Scandinavia
, and is Arabic Hindi Swedish
related to E
nglish,
ha-low-ah Dutch, and
German.
Portuguese Japanese Greek
French Polish Latin
English Spanish Korean
Mandarin
178 CULTURE VULTURE
In numbers
(300 km/h) is the speed
of the moving ball
in a game of pelota—
the fastest-moving
ball game.
105 mph
(170 km/h) The speed
at which ice hockey
pucks travel. The pucks
The new sport are frozen before the
game so they can travel
Gamers compete in online tournaments of faster and smoother.
sports video games—called eSports. These
competitions are so popular, crowds
of spectators now gather to watch the
92
The number of hat-tricks
show on screen in high-definition, very (three goals) Brazilian
Fast facts
similar to watching a live sporting event. striker Pelé scored Despite being played since
during his soccer career. the 19th century, women’s
field hockey only became an
Olympic sport in 1980 at the
Moscow Games.
01. Professional
windsurfers start this
England and South Africa. It
lasted 43 hours over 12 days—
and ended in a tie!
gravity-defying move
by riding a wave to its
The average player in the
highest point.
NBA (National Basketball
Association) stands 6 ft 7 in
(2 m) tall—which helps
with shooting hoops!
On the ball
1 Played on a four-
Usually made of
16 feathers, the
best coming from
a goose’s left wing
7 An oval-shaped
STARTER
Football
14A player will hit this leather ball
and try to score runs. The ball is Golf ball
Traditionally, this Soccer ball
very hard, with insides made leather-covered ball is
of cork, rubber, and tightly red with white seams. Tennis ball
wound string.
Bowling ball
Pool ball
CHALLENGER
Rugby ball
16 The aim of the game is to Shuttlecock
stop this ball from touching Squash ball
the ground—players can only Table tennis ball
use their knees, feet, chest, and
head to do this. They then work
as a team to kick it over a high net.
Australian rules
football
Cricket ball
GENIUS!
to maneuver this ball into looks like a long pole) to knock colored
an opponent’s end zone. balls like this one into pockets on a table.
10. Soccer ball 11. Tennis ball 12. Australian rules football 13. Basketball 14. Cricket ball 15. Baseball 16. Sepak takraw ball 17. Football 18. Pool ball
ANSWERS: 1. Squash ball 2. Netball 3. Table tennis ball 4. Jianzi shuttlecock 5. Shuttlecock 6. Field hockey ball 7. Rugby ball 8. Bowling ball 9. Golf ball
182
Game on!
1 This curved
stick is used
to get the ball
in the net, in
an outdoor
team sport. Modern sports stars, team players, and amateur
enthusiasts stay ahead of the game by using the
latest equipment. Bats, sticks, rackets, and mallets
are now stronger and lighter than ever before,
ensuring hot shots blast the balls further and
faster. Let the games begin!
3 Shuttle–
cocks are
smashed Can also be made
over a high of aluminum,
net using this but the wooden
Frames used to be
lightweight versions are used wooden, but now are
stringed by professional mostly made of carbon.
racket. players.
6 This racks up
fours and sixes
in a British bat-
and-ball game.
Usually
around 572⁄5 in
(147 cm) long.
4 Players strive to
7 This racket is
5 This long-handled used to hit a
netted stick is used to rubber ball in
throw, carry, and catch a four-walled
balls in a team sport indoor court.
that was first played
by Native Americans.
8 Both teams are skating
2 Two on thin ice as they use
competing this stick to smash
players use the puck into the
this long stick The net can
opponent’s net.
to shoot colored be made of
leather, nylon,
balls into pockets or linen.
on a cloth-
covered table.
9. Golf club 10. Polo stick 11. Rounders bat 12. Croquet mallet 13. Basque pelota bat 14. Table tennis racket 15. Tennis racket
ANSWERS: 1. Field hockey stick 2. Pool cue 3. Badminton racket 4. Baseball bat 5. Lacrosse stick 6. Cricket bat 7. Squash racket 8. Hockey stick
183
TEST YOURSELF
11 Since King
12 This hammer- Golf club
Henry VIII’s reign,
like equipment Hockey stick
this English sport
is used for a Table tennis racket
STARTER
has involved
traditional lawn Baseball bat
players striking
game in which
balls long distances Tennis racket
players navigate
with a wooden bat
balls through a
and sprinting
series of hoops.
past four bases
to win points.
Pool cue
This can also Cricket bat
CHALLENGER
be used to hit the
10 Teams on opponent’s balls
Lacrosse stick
horseback off the course. Badminton racket
compete to drive Squash racket
wooden balls
into rival goals
using this mallet.
Croquet mallet
Rounders bat
Field hockey stick
GENIUS!
Polo stick
9 Performances Basque pelota bat
13 This unusual curved
are best below
par (number of paddle evolved in parts
hits) in this game of France and Spain
where tee shots, for use in the world’s
pitches, and putts fastest ball game.
lead to birdies 14 Players across a table use
and bogeys. these rackets to hit small balls
back and forth
over a low net.
15 Aces serve
Webbing
between the
thumb and
forefinger
helps to trap
the ball.
8 Athletes throw this long spear-
Front spikes help
shaped apparatus over long distances during vertical climbs.
to determine the winner.
11. Ski poles 12. Snowboard 13. Curling stone 14. Soccer cleats 15. Hammer 16. Boxing gloves 17. Football helmet 18. Fencing foil
ANSWERS: 1. Discus 2. Pole vault 3. Shot put 4. Ice hockey helmet 5. Baseball glove 6. Cycling helmet 7. Crampons 8. Javelin 9. Rowing oars 10. Basketball shoes
185
10These specialized
shoes are designed with
shock absorption to
help players jump
11 Winter sports enthusiasts
and run safely.
hold one of these sticks in
each hand to stay on their Handle for players
feet while speeding down to hold and throw
snowy slopes. the rock
Traditionally
made of
granite
12 Like a single
supersized ski, this
apparatus keeps feet
secure when gliding 13 Players slide this
down a snow trail.
large, polished rock on
a rink of ice to make it
14 Made from
reach a central target.
traditional leather or
modern synthetics, these
sports shoes are worn to TEST YOURSELF
play one of the most
popular games in Basketball shoes
the world. A long steel wire Ice hockey helmet
attaches the ball
STARTER
Football helmet
to a handle.
Rowing oars
Baseball glove
15 The strongest
Boxing gloves
Extended studs athletes whirl this
provide extra grip heavy ball around their
when playing on grass.
16 Rivals pack a punch in head before throwing
the ring by covering their it as far as possible.
Pole vault
hands with these thick,
Ski poles
CHALLENGER
padded protectors.
Discus
Cycling helmet
Soccer cleats
Snowboard
17 Cushioned
headgear with a
face mask is perfect for
players who tackle each
other for possession of Shot put
an oval-shaped ball in this Hammer
GENIUS!
Your turn!
1 Pegs are placed
on a board to
keep the score
in this card
game. Players
score points For thousands of years, people all over the world have
by laying
down cards
played games for fun. In many of them, players move
in turn. pieces around a board, while others are played with
This card
is worth cards, dice, tiles, glass balls, or sticks. Perhaps you
10 points. have played some of them?
Dots
represent
numbers
7. Pick-up sticks 8. Snakes and Ladders 9. Go 10. Chess 11. Marbles 12. Mancala
ANSWERS: 1. Cribbage 2. Checkers 3. Dominoes 4. Jacks 5. Mahjong 6. Backgammon
187
6 One of the oldest board games in the 8 Released in the US with “chutes,”
world, this is played by two players. They roll players race their pieces around a board
two dice to move the pieces along the board to get to the finish line first. Some squares
and the first player to clear all their pieces wins. help players climb up the board faster,
while others send them sliding down.
TEST YOURSELF
STARTER CHALLENGER GENIUS!
Chess Checkers Go
Marbles Backgammon Mahjong
Little balls have been Dominoes Cribbage Pick-up sticks
used in games for
thousands of years.
Snakes and Jacks Mancala
Ladders
188 INDEX
Index
A
aircraft 30–31, 36–37
carrier 38–39
see also transportation
amphibians 78–81
eyes 94–95
see also reptiles
C
ancient civilizations 144–145 armor
games 178–179 helmets 158–159
gods see gods swords and shields 156–157 capital cities 124–125
languages 174 see also warfare see also cities; countries
lost cities 146–147 art and artists 166–167 card games 186–187
mythical creatures great masters 164–165, cars 30–33
150–151 168–169 see also transportation
animals castles 152–155
B
behavior 88–89 polar bear in the Tower of
dinosaurs see dinosaurs London 153
eyes 94–95 berries 100–101 see also buildings; kings and
mammals 50–51 see also plants queens
polar bear in the Tower of birds 66–67 cats, big 52–53
London 153 dino birds 43 chemical elements 16–19
prehistoric creatures eggs 92–93 cities 118–119
48–49 eyes 94–95 capital 124–125
reptiles see reptiles and feathers 67, 68–69 lost 146–147
tracks 90–91 of prey 70–71 skylines 122–123
and weather 133 tracks 90–91 see also buildings
see also birds; reptiles see also animals clouds 134–135
board games 186–187 see also weather
boats 30–31, 38–39 countries 116–117
see also oceans and seas; capital cities 122–123
transportation flags 6–7, 128–131
bones 20–23 crocodiles 72–75
see also human body eyes 94–95
buildings 119, 120–121
castles and forts 152–155
see also cities
D
butterflies and moths 40–41, deserts 104–105, 106
60–61 see also Earth
189
dinosaurs 42–43
carnivores 44–45
eggs 92–93
plant-eating 46–47
see also prehistoric creatures
E
Earth 106–107
cities see cities fitness see sports government 160–161
countries 116–117 flags 6–7, 128–131 political leaders 162–163
deserts 104–105, 106 flowers 98–99 revolutionaries 161,
mountains 112–113 see also plants 162–163
oceans 108–109 forts 152–155
rivers 110–111
satellite views 126–127
see also buildings
fossils 42–43
H
weather see weather see also rocks and minerals hello, saying 176–177
wonders of the world fruit 100–101 see also languages
114–115 see also plants helmets 158–159
see also planets see also armor
eggs 92–93
elements 16–19
G human body 20–21
bones 20–23
see also rocks and minerals galaxies 10–11 eyes 94–95
exercise see sports see also space magnified 24–25
eyes 94–95 games
board games 186–187
I
F sports see sports
gemstones 140–141 insects 40–41, 58–61
fish 82–83 see also rocks and minerals behavior 88–89
behavior 89 gods eggs 92–93
eggs 92–93 mythical creatures eyes 94–95
eyes 83, 94–95 150–151 invertebrates 58–63
freshwater 84–85 Roman 148–149
invertebrates 58–59, 62–63
saltwater 86–87
see also ancient civilizations
K
shellfish 58–59, 62–63 kings and queens 160–161
see also mammals, aquatic; see also castles
oceans and seas; rivers
L
languages 174–175
saying hello 176–177
lizards 72–75
see also reptiles
lost cities 146–147
190
N R
rail transportation 30, 34–35
nuts 100–101 see also transportation
see also plants reptiles 72–75
eggs 92–93
O eyes 94–95
snakes see snakes
oceans and seas 108–109 see also amphibians;
see also Earth animals
orchestral instruments rivers 110–111
170–171 satellite views 126–127
see also musical instruments wonders of the world
114–115
P see also Earth
road transportation 30–33
paintings see art and artists see also transportation
palaces see castles rocks and minerals 136–139
planes see aircraft fossils 42–43
planets 12–13 precious gemstones
Earth see Earth 140–141
see also space see also elements
plants 96–97
M
Roman gods 148–149
flowers 98–99 see also ancient civilizations
fruit 100–101
mammals 50–51 trees 97
aquatic 50–51, 56–57
see also animals; fish
vegetables 102–103
politics see government
S
math 26–27 precious gemstones 140–141 satellites 126–127
see also shapes see also rocks and minerals see also space
meteorites 138–139 sea creatures 62–63
see also rocks and minerals; aquatic mammals 50–51,
space 56–57
monkeys 54–55 fish see fish
motor vehicles 30–33 seas and oceans 108–109
see also transportation see also Earth
mountains 112–113 shapes 28–29
satellite views 126–127 see also math
wonders of the world ships 30–31, 38–39
114–115 see also oceans and seas;
see also Earth transportation
191
skeleton 20–23
see also human body T W
snakes 76–77 tortoise 72–75 warfare
behavior 89 eggs 92–93 armor see armor
eggs 92–93 trains 30, 34–35 and castles 152–153
eyes 94–95 transportation 30–31 weapons 156–157
tracks 90–91 boats 30–31, 38–39 world leaders 160–163
solar system 10–13 cars 30–33 weapons 156–157
see also space rail 30, 34–35 see also warfare
space 10–11 trees 97 weather 132–133
galaxies 10–11 see also plants clouds 134–135
golf on the Moon 178 see also Earth
meteorites 138–139
moons 12–13 V whales 56–57
wonders of the world 114–115
planets see planets vegetables 102–103 see also Earth
satellites 126–127 see also plants world leaders 160–163
solar system 10–13
spacecraft 14–15
spiders 64–65, 89
sports 178–179
balls 180–181
equipment 182–185
golf on the Moon 178
storms see weather
swords 156–57
see also armor; warfare
Answers
Now that you’ve studied the pictures at the start of each
chapter, look below to see if you found everything.