NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC HIDE AND SEEK - PDF Flipbook

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC HIDE AND SEEK CAN YOU FIND THE SNOWSHOE HARE IN THIS PICTURE

98 Views
41 Downloads
PDF 17,121,801 Bytes

Download as PDF

REPORT DMCA


OBSERVATION SUMIO HARADA / MINDEN PICTURES

Hide-and-Seek

Can you find the snowshoe hare in this picture?

SUBSCRIBE TO NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC LITTLE KIDS!

CALL TOLL FREE: 1 (800) 647-5463

Monday-Friday: 7 a.m.–8 p.m. CT, Saturday: 8 a.m.–6 p.m. CT

natgeo.com/littlekids/subscribe

Copyright © 2020 National Geographic Partners, LLC. All rights reserved. Reproduction of the whole or any part of the contents of NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC LITTLE KIDS

®without written permission is prohibited. NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC LITTLE KIDS and Yellow Border: Registered Trademarks Marcas Registradas. Printed in the U.S.A.

natgeolittlekids.com • NOVEMBER / DECEMBER 2020

LOOK INSIDE:
ANIMAL CARDS!

Penguin Party!

Why?ANIMALS KATHO MENDEN / EYEEM / GETTY IMAGES

Why do you think
dogs and cats shed?

Most cats and dogs shed so new fur can
grow. In the hot summer, they grow a
little fur. In winter, they grow a lot of fur.

2 NOVEMBER / DECEMBER 2020

SORTING

What IsDifferent?

Look at each picture in the top row.
Find the differences between it and the one below.

MANUSAPORN BHAMORBUTR / SHUTTERSTOCK (SLED); PATRICK Find one Find two Find three
MCCALL / SHUTTERSTOCK (DOG); JULIAN ROVAGNATI / difference. differences. differences.
SHUTTERSTOCK (BAG); TIM UR / SHUTTERSTOCK (APPLLE)

3N A T I O N A L G E O G R A P H I C

NATURE That’s Cool!

Mee(StaythBIeN-btoino-trounrgo) ng.

A binturong Binturongs
uses its tail like live in the
an extra arm rainforest.
to help it climb

trees.

TAIL They smell like TOM MCHUGH / SCIENCE SOURCE (BIG
buttered popcorn. PICTURE); KAJORNYOT / GETTY IMAGES (TAIL)
4 NOVEMBER / DECEMBER 2020
The smell warns
other binturongs

to stay away.

TOP ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): JAMES HORNING / SHUTTERSTOCK; AMRIPHOTO / ISTOCKPHOTO; DAVID EVISON / SHUTTERSTOCK.
MIDDLE ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): BOFOTOLUX / SHUTTERSTOCK; © KHUNASPIX / DREAMSTIME; © STEPHAN PIETZKO / DREAMSTIME.
BOTTOM ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): ANKE VAN WYK / SHUTTERSTOCK; © REDFENIKS / DREAMSTIME; HARLEY COUPER / SHUTTERSTOCK.

Name some other animal body parts. ELEPHANT —RUNK DUCK —EET RABBIT —ARS NAMING

5N A T I O N A L G E O G R A P H I C CHEETAH —AWS FISH —AIL PARROT —ING What in theWorld AreThese?

TOUCAN —EAK DEER —NTLERS GIRAFFE —ONGUE

ANIMALS

6 NOVEMBER / DECEMBER 2020 HIROYA MINAKUCHI / MINDEN PICTURES (BIG PICTURE);

NOISY
ADÉLIE
PENGUINS

Adélie penguins do not talk

like you do, but they have a

lot to say. They look alike, so

they use their voices to tell

each other apart.

Parents
take turns
going to sea
to find food.

SUZI ESZTERHAS / MINDEN PICTURES (SWIMMING) SAY MY NAME: uh-DEL-ee
7N A T I O N A L G E O G R A P H I C

Ar-rar-rar-raah.
Parents greet
each other with
loud calls and a
swaying dance.

Adélie
penguins build
rock nests on

the ground.

ROCKS

Adélies chatter while building
their nests. Neighbors squabble
over pebbles. They yell when
another bird gets too close.

8 NOVEMBER / DECEMBER 2020

It is very crowded where these
penguins live. Older chicks listen
for a parent’s call. The birds
holler back and forth until they
find each other. Hi, Mom!

An
adult Adélie
penguin is as
tall as your

waist.

CHICK

MICHAEL S. NOLAN / ALAMY (TWO PENGUINS); PAUL SOUDERS / GETTY IMAGES 9N A T I O N A L G E O G R A P H I C
(PENGUIN ON NEST); PHOTODYNAMIC / GETTY IMAGES (CHICK AND PARENT)

READING

RHYME TIME

Say the name of each animal. Read its sentence
aloud. Then look at the pictures below and find one
that rhymes with the animal in each sentence.

Example:

The fox plays on a —B —O —X .

CHAIR RUG HAT

LOG TOWEL HOUSE

10 N O V E M B E R / D E C E M B E R 2 0 2 0 ISSELEE / DREAMSTIME (FOX, DOG); AFRICA STUDIO / SHUTTERSTOCK (BOX);
JEDENDVA / DREAMSTIME (CHAIR); VISUN KHANKASEM / SHUTTERSTOCK (RUG); JUAN
MOYANO / DREAMSTIME (HAT); JIANG HONGYAN / SHUTTERSTOCK (LOG); ANDRIENKO

The dog jumps The cat sees
over a ———. a ———.

A bug sleeps on a
the ———.
The owl flies to
a —————.

A bear looks at The mouse lives
a —————. in a —————.

ANASTASIYA / SHUTTERSTOCK (TOWEL); PIXEL EMBARGO / SHUTTERSTOCK (HOUSE); LIFE ON 1 1N A T I O N A L G E O G R A P H I C
WHITE / ALAMY (CAT); IRIN-K / SHUTTERSTOCK (BUG); ERIC ISSELEE / SHUTTERSTOCK (OWL);
DARIA RYBAKOVA / DREAMSTIME (BEAR); RUDMER ZWERVER / SHUTTERSTOCK (MOUSE)

ANIMALS

AT HOME
WITH

REINDEER

Reindeer live in the very far
north, where it is cold and
snowy most of the time.

A reindeer is
about as tall
as an adult
human male.

12

HOOF

Sharp
hooves help
them walk on

icy snow.

SERGEY GORSHKOV / MINDEN PICTURES
(BIG PICTURE); EVA MÅRTENSSON / GETTY
IMAGES (HERD); MARK HAMBLIN (HOOVES)

Reindeer are good
FAWN swimmers. Both

male and female
adults have antlers.

Baby
reindeer
are called
fawns.

14 N O V E M B E R / D E C E M B E R 2 0 2 0

OTHER CHITAL
DEER

Reindeer are
one kind of deer.
Here are a few
other kinds.

WHITE-TAILED DEER MOOSE

MICHIO HOSHINO / MINDEN PICTURES ROE DEER
(SWIMMING); © MATTHIAS BREITER /
MINDEN PICTURES (FAWN); © JAGDEEP 1 5N A T I O N A L G E O G R A P H I C
RAJPUT / ARDEA (CHITAL); CRAIG BRANDT /
ACCENT ALASKA (MOOSE); © DONALD M.
JONES / MINDEN PICTURES (WHITE-TAILED
DEER) © DUNCAN USHER / ARDEA (ROE DEER)

FINDING

WHAT COMES

A pattern is something that repeats. EASY
Look at the sleds in each row. Do you
see a pattern? Point to the sled in the
row that comes next.

HARDER

HARDEST

16 N O V E M B E R / D E C E M B E R 2 0 2 0 EASY: KALABI YAU / SHUTTERSTOCK (ORANGE SLED); 3DMI /
SHUTTERSTOCK (TAN SLED); HARDER: GRAJA / SHUTTERSTOCK
(RED AND YELLOW SLED); HOMEART / SHUTTERSTOCK (RED SLED);

NEXT?

?
?

HARDEST: VENIAMIN KRASKOV / SHUTTERSTOCK (ORANGE ?
SLED); SUSAN FIETZE / SHUTTERSTOCK (WOODEN SLED);
JUPITERIMAGES / GETTY IMAGES (GREEN AND TAN SLED) 1 7N A T I O N A L G E O G R A P H I C

NATURE

A GECKO GROWS

MISSING TAIL

A gecko is a GROWING TAIL
kind of lizard.
Sometimes an
enemy grabs a
gecko’s tail. The
tail falls off, and
the gecko can
run away.

Can you think of other animals that have tails?

18 N O V E M B E R / D E C E M B E R 2 0 2 0 © DWIGHT KUHN / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED (ALL)

A NEW TAIL

It does not hurt the
gecko when its tail falls
off. The gecko’s tail
begins to grow back.

3

Soon the gecko’s
new tail will look as
good as its old tail!

NEW TAIL

1 9N A T I O N A L G E O G R A P H I C

SCIENCE

VOLCANOES!

Deep inside Earth, some of the rock
gets very hot. In some places, there
are pockets of hot, partly melted
rock called magma.

The magma pushes
up through cracks
in Earth’s crust, or
outer layer.

Then, boom! It
explodes out to the
MAGMA surface. A volcano
has erupted.

20 N O V E M B E R / D E C E M B E R 2 0 2 0 ANDREA DANTI / SHUTTERSTOCK (ART); RALF LEHMANN / SHUTTERSTOCK
(LAVA); CARSTEN PETER / NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC IMAGE COLLECTION
(SCIENTISTS); AMMIT JACK / SHUTTERSTOCK (VOLCANO)

LAVA

When magma People who
flows out study volcanoes are
called volcanologists
of a volcano, it is (say vahl-kuh-NAH-
called lava. luh-jists). They must
work very close to
When a
volcano erupts, the volcano.
hot gases and ash
shoot into the air. FROM THE
Lava flows down PAGES OF

the volcano.

2 1N A T I O N A L G E O G R A P H I C

FINDING

BUGGING

Look at each picture. Draw a line with
your finger through all the striped
bugs. Then tap all the bugs with spots.

BUMBLEBEE

SIX SPOT
BURNET MOTH

BANDED ORANGE FORESTER
BUTTERFLY MOTH

22 N O V E M B E R / D E C E M B E R 2 0 2 0





OUT Editor in Chief and Vice President,
Kids Magazines & Digital
CINNABAR MOTH LADYBUG Rachel Buchholz
CATERPILLAR
Design Director, Magazines
LONGHORN STEPHEN DALTON / MINDEN PICTURES (BEE); GORAN_SAFAREK / SHUTTERSTOCK (BURNET MOTH); NICK UPTON / NPL / MINDEN PICTURES (CATERPILLAR); Eileen O’Tousa-Crowson
BEETLE KLETR / SHUTTERSTOCK (LADYBUG); JOLANDA AALBERS / SHUTTERSTOCK (ORANGE BUTTERFLY); PAUL REEVES PHOTOGRAPHY / SHUTTERSTOCK (MOTH);
DOUG LEMKE / SHUTTERSTOCK (BUCKEYE BUTTERFLY); JIRI PROCHAZKA / SHUTTERSTOCK (BEETLE); JANET MUIR / DANITADELIMONT (COVER) Editorial Ruth A. Musgrave, Contributing Writer
How Photo Shannon Hibberd, Senior Photo Editor
many of Art Dawn McFadin, Contributing Designer
these bugs Production Sean Philpotts, Director
can fly? Digital Laura Goertzel, Director

BUCKEYE PUBLISHED BY
BUTTERFLY NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PARTNERS, LLC
Chairman of the Board of Directors Jean Case
Chairman, National Geographic Partners Gary E. Knell

Editorial Director
Susan Goldberg
Managing Editor, Magazines
David Brindley

International Magazine Publishing
Yulia Petrossian Boyle, Senior Vice President;

Jennifer Jones, Director;
Leanna Lakeram, Editorial and Marketing Coordinator

Finance
Jeannette Swain, Senior Budget Manager;
Tammi Colleary-Loach, Senior Manager, Rights Clearance;

Joey Wolfkill, Senior Business Specialist
Consumer Marketing

John MacKethan, Vice President and General Manager;
North American Consumer Marketing;

Mark Viola, Director, Circulation Planning; Janet H. Zavrel,
Manager, Circulation Planning

Consumer Insights and Analytics
Jessica Bates, Senior Director
Publicity
Anna Kukelhaus (202) 912-6724
Kelsey Taylor (202) 912-6776

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC LITTLE KIDS,
Issue 83, November / December 2020

(ISSN 1934-8363), is published bimonthly by
National Geographic Partners, LLC, 1145 17th Street N.W.,

Washington, DC 20036-4688.

POSTMASTER: Please send address changes to
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC LITTLE KIDS, P.O. Box 37545, Boone,
IA 50037. If the Postal Service alerts NGP that your magazine is
undeliverable, NGP has no further obligation unless it receives

a corrected address within two years.

SUBSCRIPTIONS: U.S., $25; to Canada, $30;
elsewhere, $36; all U.S. funds. Single copy: U.S., $5; to Canada,
$10; elsewhere, $15; all in U.S. funds. In Canada, Agreement

number 1000010298, return undeliverable Canadian
addresses to NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC LITTLE KIDS,

P.O. Box 819 STN Main, Markham, ON L3P 9Z9

Parents:
Follow us on Twitter @NGKids
and like us on Facebook.

PRINTED ON 100% PEFC-CERTIFIED PAPER—
PEFC/29-31-58—Please recycle.

2 3N A T I O N A L G E O G R A P H I C

wild cards

CAROLINA CHICKADEE

COPYRIGHT © 2020 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PARTNERS, LLC

Carolina
chickadee

FUN FACTs

If you hear a bird calling “chick-a-
dee-dee-dee,” look around for this

kind of chickadee. The bird eats
insects, spiders, seeds, and fruits.

© DAYBREAK IMAGERY / KIMBALL STOCK

wild cards

GOLDEN LION TAMARIN

golden lion
tamarin

FUN FACTs

Tamarins are monkeys and
live in trees. The golden lion
tamarin’s long hair looks similar

to a lion’s mane.

© ARCO IMAGES GMBH / ALAMY

wild cards

SPINY SEAHORSE

spiny
seahorse

FUN FACTs

Seahorses are fish. A spiny
seahorse uses its long snout to
suck up food. It eats tiny ocean
creatures that swim close by.

© ALEX MUSTARD / NATURE PICTURE LIBRARY

wild cards

ELK

elk

FUN FACTs

Male elk grow huge antlers.
They use their antlers to fight with
other male elk. The winner gets to

be the boss of his elk herd.

© DESIGN PICS INC. / ALAMY

wild cards

COMMON MILKWEED GRASSHOPPER

common
milkweed
grasshopper

FUN FACTs

This kind of grasshopper tastes
bad to animals that try to eat it.

Its bright-red color reminds
enemies: “I am not yummy!”

© CHRIS MATTISON / ALAMY

wild cards

MALAYAN TAPIR

Malayan
tapir

FUN FACTs

Tapirs live in forests in parts of
Asia. Their black-and-white

pattern helps them blend in with
shadows and hide from enemies.

© JUNIORS BILDARCHIV GMBH / ALAMY


Data Loading...