Colorado Pictures and Facts https://kids.nationalgeographic.com/geography/states/article/colorado
Get facts and photos about the 38th state.
Colorado is nicknamed the Centennial State because it became a state the same year
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Get facts and photos about the 38th state.
Colorado is nicknamed the Centennial State because it became a state the same year
Mysterious characters from the series.
scientist who worked with Cruz’s mom in the Synthesis—and who supposedly died in the same
Read about a chimpanzee that took action when a flying drone got a little too close to her zoo enclosure.
It seems one chimpanzee might have felt the same way.
Why do we „fall back?“
It usually happens on December 21 or 22, at the exact same second around the world
See how this powerful culture ruled from the Andes mountains of Peru 500 years ago.
At the same time, diseases like smallpox brought by European explorers killed around
Help keep the Earth healthy by ditching single-use plastic items. Plan your next party with paper pom-pom decorations instead of balloons.
(You can use the same color or mix it up.)
A blob the size of a teacup slinks along the ocean floor in the shallow waters off of Australia. It’s a type of sea slug called the nudibranch (NEW-dih-bronk), a slime-oozing creature with a boneless body. Many of them also sport brilliant colors and eye-catching patterns on their skin. In fact this sticky slug is often considered one of the most beautiful animals in the world. IN THE MOOD FOR FOOD Over 3,000 species of nudibranchs exist, and most live in shallow, tropical waters. They can be anywhere from a quarter of an inch to 12 inches long and can weigh up to 3.3 pounds. These sea slugs spend their time sliding on their bellies around their habitat in search of snacks. The animals have a set of curved teeth, which they use to eat coral, sponges, and fish eggs off the ocean floor. Nudibranchs use tentacles on their heads to poke around for grub. TRUE COLORS The nudibranch’s meals don’t just satisfy its hunger—the food also gives the animal its coloring. When the sea slug eats, it absorbs and displays its prey’s pigment—the substance that gives the prey its color. Some nudibranchs also absorb toxins from certain prey and secrete the poison from their own skin. This allows them to fend off enemies such as fish. So the nudibranch is stunning, resourceful, and it recycles? This slug sounds far from sluggish! Text by Andrea Silen / NGS Staff
1:36 Slimy Sea Slug Get ready for some slime on this episode of Scuba Sam’s World
Here’s how to make a pinhole camera for safe solar eclipse viewing.
Put the paper inside the box on the same end you just traced.
You’ll want to go to bat for these awesome mammals after reading about their supercool skills.
A Kitti’s hog-nosed bat from Southeast Asia weighs about the same as a dime.
See pictures and read about Fishlake National Forest on National Geographic Kids.
But the over 40,000 trees in this grove share the same enormous, twisting root system