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Other editions of book The Circulatory System

  • The Circulatory System

    Joseph Midthun

    eBook (World Book, Inc., May 28, 2018)
    How does your body turn a sandwich into a soccer game? Take a guided tour through The Digestive and Urinary Systems to see how your body transforms the food you eat into materials to build muscles and provide energy. Cartoon guides lead the journey that begins at the mouth with stops at the stomach, liver, and intestines. Comic-book text and fun illustrations help young readers understand key concepts in human anatomy. Kids can follow along to learn how the kidneys remove wastes and keep you healthy. With bright, colorful pages, World Book’s Building Blocks of Life Science helps make learning fun and easy for young students with a primary reading level of grades 3 through 5. Each book focuses on a particular organ system in the human body. Cartoon guides creatively pair humor with fact-filled text. They make even the most difficult topics in human anatomy easy to understand. Helpful glossaries and indexes in each volume direct students to the most important terms and topics. Help young learners in your life get ahead—and have fun doing so—with World Book’s Building Blocks of Life Science!
  • The Circulatory System

    Joseph Midthun, Samuel Hiti

    Paperback (World Book, Inc., June 1, 2016)
    This graphic nonfiction book introduces the circulatory system of the human body. The Building Blocks of Life Science volumes feature whimsical characters to guide young readers through topics exploring the human body systems. Full-page or full-spread diagrams detail the different parts of each body system. The science is as sound as the presentation is fun! The volumes include a glossary, an additional resource list, and an index. Several spreads in each volume are illustrated with photographs to help clarify concepts and facts.
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  • The Circulatory System

    Joseph Midthun, Paul Kobasa

    Hardcover (World Book, Inc., Jan. 10, 2017)
    How is your heart like a bicycle pump? Find out on a guided tour of the human body in The Circulatory System. Comic-book-style illustrations along with easy-to-read text help young readers understand key concepts in human anatomy. Kids can follow cartoon red blood cells as they journey through arteries and veins to deliver oxygen and nutrients to the body. Cartoon guides help explain how the body maintains a constant temperature, why blood pressure is important, and how white blood cells help combat disease. With bright, colorful pages, World Books Building Blocks of Life Science helps make learning fun and easy for young students with a primary reading level of grades 3 through 5. Each book focuses on a particular organ system in the human body. Cartoon guides creatively pair humor with fact-filled text. They make even the most difficult topics in human anatomy easy to understand. Helpful glossaries and indexes in each volume direct students to the most important terms and topics. Help young learners in your life get aheadand have fun doing sowith World Books Building Blocks of Life Science!
  • The Circulatory System

    Robert Silverstein, Alvin Silverstein, Virginia Silverstein

    Library Binding (21st Century, Dec. 9, 1997)
    Explains the purpose of the circulatory system, and looks at arteries, veins, blood, the immune system, the kidneys, blood disorders, and heart problems
  • The Circulatory System

    Joseph Midthun, Samuel Hiti

    Hardcover (World Book, Inc., June 1, 2016)
    This graphic nonfiction book introduces the circulatory system of the human body. The Building Blocks of Life Science volumes feature whimsical characters to guide young readers through topics exploring the human body systems. Full-page or full-spread diagrams detail the different parts of each body system. The science is as sound as the presentation is fun! The volumes include a glossary, an additional resource list, and an index. Several spreads in each volume are illustrated with photographs to help clarify concepts and facts.
    S
  • The Circulatory System

    Robert Silverstein;Alvin Silverstein;Virginia Silverstein

    School & Library Binding (21st Century, March 15, 1831)
    None