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How Come? Planet Earth

2010-04-10 
基本信息·出版社:Workman Publishing Company ·页码:332 页 ·出版日期:1999年10月 ·ISBN:0761112391 ·International Standard Book Number:076 ...
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 How Come? Planet Earth


基本信息·出版社:Workman Publishing Company
·页码:332 页
·出版日期:1999年10月
·ISBN:0761112391
·International Standard Book Number:0761112391
·条形码:9780761112396
·EAN:0019628112392/9780761112396
·装帧:平装
·正文语种:英语

内容简介 在线阅读本书

Kids never stop asking questions. And Kathy Wollard, whose Los Angeles Times syndicated column "How come?" appears in newspapers around the world, never stops answering them. In five years since the first How Come? was published, Ms. Wollard has written hundreds of columns addressing the whys, whats, wheres, and hows sent in by her readers.

A direct follow-up to the original How Come?, now with 204,00 copies in print, How Come? Planet Earth is packed with lively, engagingly written, and often wittily illustrated answers to questions that kids have about the natural world around them. There are questions about animals - Why are electric eels electrical? (the charges not only help them find their way around in the dark, but act as a defense system). About human body - Where does the fat go when you lose weight? (it's burned up inside the muscles for energy). About Earth science - Why are storm clouds gray? (they contain a lot of water, which absorbs more sunlight than an ordinary cloud does, so storm clouds appear ominously dark). And just about everyday stuff - How do they make chewing gum? Why are diamonds the hardest material on Earth? Why do dogs bark?

For all kids who want to know (and all kids want to know), and for the parents who can't always explain it to them (no parents know every answer), How Come? Planet Earth is the perfect reference and companion.
作者简介 Kathy Wollard also writes a weekly health feature for Newsday, and has published articles for Self, American Health, Popular Science, and Scholastic Science World.

Debra Solomon is the illustrator of How Come?, the column and the book, as well as A Good Friend. She is also an animation artist whose work was featured on Rosie O'Donnell's Kids Are Punny.
媒体推荐 "...plenty of specifics in a fresh, entertaining way that will hook both casual browsers and serious young seekers after truth." -- School Library Journal, May 2000
编辑推荐 Why do people get goose bumps? Why don't fish and dolphins sleep? Why do ships and planes disappear in the Bermuda Triangle? How does camera film record pictures? What are you wondering about? Chances are, Kathy Wollard can find the answers. All the queries in this book of questions and answers were asked by real kids, who mailed and e-mailed them to Wollard's newspaper column, "How Come?" Organized into four loose categories, entitled "Turbulent Earth" (about deserts, oceans, icebergs, fog, volcanoes... anything to do with Earth), "Safari" (about animals), "Bodyworks" (about people), and "Factory Field Trip" (about things we make, such as bubble gum and diamonds), this original science reference book explains 125 mysteries of Planet Earth. A follow-up to the bestselling How Come?, Wollard's How Come? Planet Earth follows a similar format. Each two- or  three-page chapter describes an earthly phenomenon in accurate, entertaining, easy-to-understand terms, with accompanying goofball cartoons by Debra Solomon. Grownups who have found themselves at a loss when children ask "Why are my fingers wrinkly after a bath?" or  "How do jet airplanes fly?" will appreciate this collection of solutions as much as the curious young readers themselves. Browse at will, or read it cover to cover--answers are at hand! (Ages 8 and older) --Emilie Coulter
专业书评 From the Back Cover

THE WHYS OF THE WORLD
Know the answers: about quicksand and chameleons, butterfly wings and the bounce inside a rubber ball. A direct follow-up to the bestselling How Come?, How Come? Planet Earth explains 125 mysteries about the world we think we know best. Here are questions about Earth--how volcanoes erupt and why oceans don't overflow. Questions about animals, from camels' humps to a cat's purr. Questions about people--sleepwalking, warts, and why bruises are black and blue--and a section called "Factory Field Trip," on how we make things from mummies to chewing gum to microwave ovens.

A Note to Parents: No one remembers all those science facts, but How Come? Planet Earth and the original How Come? help with even the trickiest science questions. So the next time your child asks why stomachs growl or how a jet airplane works, here are the answers.
目录
What Are You Wondering About?

Turbulent Earth

How does Earth maintain its speed of rotation? Why doesn't it slow down?

How was Earth formed, and what was it like in the beginning?

Does air weigh anything?

Why do trees and other plants take in carbon dioxide, while we take in oxygen?

What makes a volcano erupt?

Why don't we have ice ages anymore?

If you dug all the way through Earth, would you end up in space?

What causes quicksand?

Why do some mountain ranges look blue if they are covered with green forests?

How come there are deserts?

How do lakes form?

If the rivers drain into the oceans, why don't the oceans fill up and overflow?

How do islands form?

How do icebergs form?

What are the jet streams, and what causes them?

What causes the different shapes of clouds?

Why are rain clouds black in color? What happens to clouds after they form?

What causes the sound of thunder?

Why does a rainbow always form an arch?

What makes dew appear on grass?

What is the cause of fog?

Why do jet airplanes leave trails in the sky that look like clouds?

Why does the sky turn colors at sunset?

How is Earth like a magnet?

Is it true draining water swirls in opposite directions north and south of the equator?

Why do ships and planes disappear in the Bermuda Triangle?

Why do we seem to see a face in the Moon?

Why does Earth have only one moon?

How come Earth doesn't have any rings?

Where does dust come from?

Safari

How do fish breathe underwater?

How come fish and dolphins don't sleep?

Why do some sharks die if they stop swimming?

If whales can't walk, why do they have hips?

Do whales really sing?

Why are electric eels electrical?

How does a chameleon change its color?

How can a hummingbird fly both forward and backward?

How do birds know where south is?

Why are butterfly wings so colorful?

How come moths eat wool?

Where do bugs go in cold weather, reappearing like magic when it warms up?

How many eyes does a fly have?

How do you get lice, and how do you get rid of them?

Why do elephants have such big ears?

How can camels survive with little or no water?

Why does a porcupine have quills? How do they work?

Why do raccoons have black masks?

Do flying squirrels really exist?

How do cows digest their food?

Why do dogs bark?

How do cats purr?

Why do cats' eyes shine in the dark?

How do animals communicate without language?

How come so many animals have tails (and we don't)?

How did dinosaurs get their long and difficult names?

Why do animals become extinct?

Bodyworks

Why do fingers get wrinkled after soaking in water for a long time?

Why do people get goose bumps?

Why do we get bruises? And why are they black and blue?

How does blood stop flowing out of a cut?

What makes your nose bleed?

How does hair grow?

Why does hair mostly grow on our heads?

Why do men seem to lose their hair more often than women do?

Why do we get pimples?

What causes warts?

What causes freckles?

Why does the sun make our skin darker, but our hair lighter?

Why and how do we get fevers?

Why do our ears pop when we fly on a plane or drive in the mountains?

Why do people sneeze?

What makes us allergic to things?

What causes an itch, and how come it feels better when you scratch it?

How does the nose smell things?

How come chopping onions makes you cry?

What gives foods their different tastes?

Why do our faces flush, eyes water, and noses fun when we eat hot, spicy food?

What is cholesterol?

Why is cigarette smoking bad for the lungs?

How does alcohol affect the body?

Why does our breath smell bad, especially in the morning?

Why do people burp?

What makes your stomach growl?

How come acids in the stomach don't destroy it?

Do we really need an appendix?

Where do our voices come from?

Why do people snore?

Why do we need sleep?

Why do people sleepwalk?

What causes headaches?

How do muscles work, and how do you build muscles?

How does the heart work?

What is high blood pressure?

Why do we run out of breath when we run?

How does sweating work?

Where does the fat go when you lose weight?

What is the difference between identical and fraternal twins?

What makes our eyes the color they are?

Why do we giggle when we hear jokes?

Why do we sometimes feel that what we're experiencing has happened before?

Factory Field Trip

How is chewing gum made?

How is chocolate made?

How is decaffeinated coffee made?

Why does rubber bounce?

How is glass made? How is it shaped into drinking glasses and pop bottles?

What is perfume made of? And where do they come up with the fragrance names?

How are diamonds formed?

How do gems form and how do they get their color?

How is silk made?

How does detergent get clothes clean?

How does a refrigerator work?

How does a microwave oven cook food?

How does a radio work?

How does a compact disc play music?

How does a mercury thermometer work?

How does hot air lift a balloon?

How do jet airplanes fly?

How is paper made?

How does glue work?

How does a magnifying glass work?

How does camera film record pictures?

How do electric lightbulbs emit light?

How does a telephone work?

How were mummies made?

Index

Special Thanks


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文摘 What causes quicksand?

Fans of the old Lassie TV show from the 1950s and '60s--or just about any kids' adventure show from that period--have fond, scary memories of quicksand. A character is strolling along, minding their own business--little Timmy or Flicka the horse, or Rin Tin Tin the dog--and suddenly they feel the solid ground give out from under them. Whichever character hasn't fallen in goes for help. And using tree branches or brute force, Gramps or Lassie or a horse named Fury slowly pulls the sinking someone out of the quicksand and safely onto hard ground. What is quicksand? Quicksand is ordinary sand that has become what scientists call "quick." Clay can also become quick, and there are quick bogs and swamps too. "Quickness" is the way water flowing through sand, clay, or other material can lift and separate its small grains.

In ordinary sand, whether wet or dry, sand particles are pushed up against each other. But when sand becomes quick, an invisible cushion of water holds sand grains a bit apart. So what looks like a solid surface is really--oops!--liquid, a thick soup of water and sand.

In quicksand patches, ordinary sand is sitting on top of a body of water, such as a bubbling spring. The water is trying to push upward; the sand is weighing the water down. The sand becomes "quick" when the water pressure underneath balances out or exceeds the weight of the sand above. As each grain is surrounded by a thin film of water, the sand particles lose contact and friction. Toss a rock onto what looks like solid sand, and you'll see it disappear below the surface, just as if you'd thrown it into a lake.

Any kind of sand--rough or smooth, mixed with pebbles or not--can become quick. But heavier grains need a more powerfully surging spring to lift them, while the finest-grain, roundest sand can become quick even from weakly flowing water.

Quicksand is found everywhere water and sand live side by side--creek beds and
……