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Books with title Let's Look at the Jungle

  • Let's Look at the Jungle

    Christian Broutin

    Spiral-bound (Torchlight, May 8, 2012)
    Explore the jungle and discover how it grows and where to find its unusual birds, insects, mammals, and reptiles.
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  • Let's Look at the Sky

    Donald Grant

    Spiral-bound (Moonlight Publishing, May 1, 2006)
    Discover the planets and stars of our solar system. Find out what lies beyond our own galaxy.
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  • Let's Look at the Pond

    Ute Fuhr, Raoul Sautai

    Spiral-bound (Close-up, April 1, 2012)
    Young readers will find that the pond is full of animal and plant life, including water skaters (the ends of its long legs are covered in a kind of oil, so it can float on the surface without getting wet or sinking) and frogs (its skin allows air to come through its pores, this is how it breathes).
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  • Let's Look at the Stream

    Pierre de Hugo

    Spiral-bound (Moonlight Publishing, June 1, 2012)
    A close up look at the animal life in the stream reveals such creatures as the diving beetle (its eyes are divided into two parts which allow it to see as well underwater as on the surface) and the crayfish (the end of its tail spreads out into a fan, with which it can push itself backwards and escape quickly).
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  • Let's Go to the Jungle

    Tony Palazzo

    Hardcover (Doubleday, March 15, 1962)
    None
  • Let's Look at the Hedge

    Pierre de Hugo

    Spiral-bound (Close-up, June 1, 2012)
    The hedge is full of animal and plant life. Readers will take a closer look through a microscope at a fieldmouse (its teeth are strong enough to gnaw holes in wood), a hedgehog (when it feels threatened, it rolls into a ball), and a snail (its shell protects it from the sun, wind, and rain, but it also acts as its lungs).
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  • Let's Look at the Hedge

    Caroline Allaire

    Hardcover (Moonlight Publishing, June 1, 2012)
    The seashore scene has plenty of animals to spot, including a shrimp (it uses its pincers to cut up food and take it to its mouth just like a knife and fork) and a sea anemone (it reproduces itself like a plant with buds--the babies grow from the base of the anemone and gradually detach themselves).
  • Let's Look at the Hedge

    None

    Hardcover (Moonlight Publishing Ltd, Feb. 5, 2008)
    None
  • Let's Look at the Pond

    With Gallimard Jeunesse By (author) Caroline Allaire, Illustrated by Raoul Sautai, Illustrated by Ute Fuhr

    Hardcover (Moonlight Publishing Ltd, March 15, 2012)
    Young readers will find that the pond is full of animal and plant life, including water skaters (the ends of its long legs are covered in a kind of oil, so it can float on the surface without getting wet or sinking) and frogs (its skin allows air to come through its pores, this is how it breathes).
  • Let's Look at the Rain

    Jacqueline Dineen

    Hardcover (Hodder & Stoughton Childrens Division, Aug. 2, 1988)
    None