Kia ora viewers. Welcome to the Blog of B4. Throughout 2012 we will be sharing our learning, experiences and celebrations, therefore feel free to visit, and don't hesitate to post a positive comment about what you see.
Photogenic B4
Saturday, March 17, 2012
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
In the
second week of Term One, we were discussing how animals belong to a variety of
families. We discussed how dogs were from the canine family, cats were felines,
but were curious about what family humans are in. After searching on Google,
using the search terms ‘human’ and ‘family we found the following information:
Australopithecus africanus reconstruction
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Kingdom:
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Phylum:
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Class:
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Order:
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Suborder:
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Infraorder:
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Parvorder:
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Superfamily:
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Family:
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Pongidae Elliot, 1913
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The Hominidae
(
/hɒˈmɪnɨdiː/; anglicized hominids, also known as great
apes[notes 1]), as the term is used here, form
a taxonomic family, including four extant genera: chimpanzees (Pan), gorillas (Gorilla), humans (Homo), and orangutans (Pongo).[1]
I Wonder Why...
Facts
About Worms
At Lunchtime on Friday, To Koha found some worms on the
field. We discussed how worms benefit our garden, what they look like and
debated whether or not they have eyes. After a colourful discussion we decided
to check onm the Internet to see if our ideas and theories were correct. We
found the following information:
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How Lightning Happens
On Friday afternoon there was an exciting thunderstorm. We know that thunder is
the sound of the lightning, and sound travels slower than light. We didn’t
however, know how lightning happens, so we searched on Google using the
search terms ‘lightning’ and ‘originate’. We were rewarded with the following
information.
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Lightning is
an electric current, and just like the electricity lurking in the outlets in
your house, it can be deadly. Have you ever gotten a shock by shuffling across
a carpet and then touching something made of metal? Then you've experienced the
same process that makes lightning.
Within a thundercloud, many small bits of ice
bump into each other as they swirl around in the air. All those collisions
create an electrical charge, just like the one that built up in you when you
crossed the carpet. After a while, the whole cloud fills up with electrical charges (usually with a negative charge closest to the earth). Since opposites attract each other, that causes a positive charge to build up on the ground beneath the cloud. The ground's electrical charge concentrates around anything that sticks up, such as mountains, lone trees, people, or even blades of grass. The charge streaming up from these points eventually connects with a charge reaching down from the clouds, and--zap!--lightning strikes.
The intense heat of the lightning bolt causes the surrounding air to explode outward with a gigantic boom--thunder.
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