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Books in Natural History Museums series

  • Catching Yellowstone's Wild Trout: A Fly-Fishing History and Guide

    Chris Hunt, Mike Sepelak

    Paperback (The History Press, June 17, 2019)
    Fly-fishing has its sacred waters the world over. Yellowstone National Park claims some of the craft's most storied destinations. Casting in the Firehole River is like going back in time to when bison roamed nearly every meadow in the West. Restored to their natal streams after near extinction, native Arctic grayling can once again be plucked from icy water at the foot of breathtaking waterfalls. Meanwhile, a daylong hike into true wild country rewards an angler with a chance to catch trophy native cutthroat trout on a lonely mountain lake. Local journalist and experienced angler Chris Hunt crafts both a guide and homage to Yellowstone's iconic and wild trout.
  • Ocean Sticker Book

    Natural History Museum

    Paperback (Natural History Museum, London, Dec. 1, 2013)
    A fun and informative introduction to life in the world’s oceans, packed with fascinating facts, puzzles, games, and 100 reusable stickers Written and designed for younger readers, this book contains stickers of fish, mammals, amphibians, and invertebrates, from the great white shark to the tiny seahorse. The stickers are accompanied by fun learning pages on the behavior and habitats of the different animals, which explain what they look like, where they live, how they move, and what they eat. There are also some exciting puzzles and games, including a spot-the-difference puzzle, and readers can create their own underwater scene by adding stickers to a colorful double-page landscape spread. Perfect for kids who want to know more about the amazing array of creatures that live underwater, the book is fully checked and approved by the department of zoology at the Natural History Museum, London.
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  • Rocks and Minerals Sticker Book

    Natural History Museum

    Paperback (Natural History Museum, London, Dec. 1, 2013)
    A colorful and informative introduction to some of the most common rocks and minerals, packed with amazing facts, fun puzzles and games, and more than 100 reusable stickers Ideal for younger readers, this beautiful sticker book showcases stones from the tiger’s eye and leopard skin stone to rubies, sapphires, diamonds, emeralds, and many more. The stickers are accompanied by fun learning pages with information on how rocks and minerals form, what they are made into, and how to identify them, as well as lots of bite-size facts about their size, color, and origin. Readers can put their knowledge to the test with some puzzles and games, including a coloring activity and rocky maze, and create their own scenes by adding stickers to a colorful double page landscape spread. The book is fully checked and approved by the department of zoology at the Natural History Museum, London. The museum’s world-class collections of minerals, ores, meteorites, rocks, and soils include specimens from Mars and the moon, and from the earliest bodies that helped to form the solar system 4.56 billion years ago.
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  • Cacti of the Desert Southwest

    MEG QUINN

    Paperback (Rio Nuevo, Jan. 1, 2002)
    The deserts of the American Southwest boast a remarkably diversity of drought-tolerant plant life, including many species found nowhere else on earth. And no group says desert quite like cacti. Their prickly nature notwithstanding, cacti and the desert habitats in which they reside are especially fragile. Indeed, Saguaro National Park and Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument were established primarily to protect the largest concentrations of these respective species. Others, such as the Pima pineapple cactus, are less conspicuous but also more rare and in need of special protection and conservation.
  • Poison: Sinister Species with Deadly Consequences

    Dr. Mark Siddall, Megan Gavin

    Hardcover (Sterling Signature, June 3, 2014)
    Beware: it's a poisonous world—and this is the ultimate guide to surviving nature at her most toxic! Journeying from the plains of the outback to the jungles of Madagascar, Dr. Mark Siddall, curator of Invertebrate Zoology at the American Museum of Natural History, delves into earth's deadliest and most sinister creatures. Seventy-five wittily written, engaging, and illustrated entries cover things that sting, that bite, and that you shouldn't touch or eat. Siddall provides fascinating insight into these species and their sometimes lethal, occasionally beneficial poisons.
  • The Prehistoric Times

    Libby Deutsch, Matthew Hodson, Neave Parker

    Paperback (Frances Lincoln Children's Books, June 1, 2017)
    A newspaper-style activity book for the discerning dinosaur, packed with paleo puzzles, fearsome facts and giganto games. Meet real-life reptiles and read fascinating features, which include:Seeking a self-defence class? Hear what a cetiosaur has to say about staying safe.Wondering what’s happening with the weather? See whether meteor showers are here to stay with our fail-safe forecast.Confused why #trees are trending? Learn why the hypsilophodons think branches are best. And much, much more…
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  • Fur Seals and Sea Lions

    Roger Kirkwood, Simon Goldsworthy

    Paperback (CSIRO Publishing, Aug. 21, 2013)
    Fur seals and sea lions are large, charismatic carnivores that play and engage the public with both their skill and their dog-like appearance. Fur seals and sea lions are top level predators in southern Australian marine ecosystems and were harvested to near extinction 200 years ago. Fur seals are now recovering and are a common feature of islands and near-shore waters across southern Australia, and may reach pre-harvest levels in the next few decades. Sea lions, however, are still endangered and their numbers appear not to be recovering like fur seals and have declined at some locations. All species interact with fisheries, often to the detriment of both fishery and seal. This book outlines the comparative evolutionary ecology, biology, life-history, behavior, conservation status, threats, history of human interactions and latest research on the three species of otariids that live in the waters of southern Australia: the Australian fur seal, New Zealand fur seal and Australian sea lion. It also includes brief descriptions of Antarctic and Subantarctic seals that occupy the Antarctic pack-ice and remote Australian territories of Macquarie Island and Heard Island.
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  • Animal Life: Secrets of the Animal World Revealed

    Katie Parsons, Steve Parker, Elizabeth White, Tim Halliday, Kim Bryan

    Paperback (DK, )
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  • The Oceanic Times

    Libby Deutsch, Matthew Hodson

    Paperback (Frances Lincoln Children's Books, June 7, 2018)
    Read all about it! The Oceanic Times is here, a spoof newspaper for sea creatures great and small, packed with jokes, facts and activities. Take a tour of a coral reef in Homes and Properties; join the dots to see who won the synchronised swimming medal at the animal Olympics; and find out if you're a mammal or a fish in our revealing quiz!
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  • Stardust from Space

    Monica Grady, Lucia deLeiris

    Hardcover (Frances Lincoln Children's Books, June 11, 2007)
    Far from the city, millions of starts are visible in the night sky. But these beautiful, twinkling lights are really giant balls of fusing gas that lie millions and millions of miles away and formed from a substance known as stardust. Stardust made the planets, too, and the Moon, comets, meteorites, and asteroids. In this absorbing book, based on the latest scientific information, young readers learn what this fundamental dust is and where its journey started. The wonders of the cosmos are beautifully depicted in Lucia de Leiris’s luminous illustrations.
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  • The Zoological Times

    Libby Deutsch, Matthew Hodson

    Paperback (Frances Lincoln Children's Books, March 1, 2018)
    Read all about it! The Zoological Times brings you all the latest news from the animal kingdom! Find out who came out on top in the animal Olympics, discover the best swamps for getting a bit of me-time in the travel section and find out why pigeons are so concerned about climate change. A hilarious spoof newspaper about animals, published in association with the Natural History Museum, packed with facts, jokes, puzzles and activities that will keep children occupied for hours.
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  • Environmental Justice in New Mexico: Counting Coup

    Valerie Rangel, Bob Haozous

    Paperback (The History Press, Feb. 4, 2019)
    In New Mexico and across America, communities of color bear the brunt of contamination from generations of expansion, mining, nuclear testing and illegal dumping. The nation's largest uranium waste spill occurred in 1979 at Church Rock, and radioactivity in the Rio Puerco remains at dangerous levels. The National Trust for Historic Preservation listed Mount Taylor as one of the ten most endangered historic sites in America. After decades of sickness from Rio Grande river water, the first female governor of a Pueblo Nation, Verna Olgin Teller, led tribal members to a Supreme Court victory over Albuquerque. Valerie Rangel presents stories of strife and struggle in the war to protect the integrity of natural systems, rights to religious freedom and the continuation of traditional customs.