In this title, early fluent readers meet some of the smallest dinosaurs as they survive in their prehistoric habitats. Read along as we meet nine different creatures and learn about their hunting techniques, diets, and behaviors. Vibrant illustrations and carefully leveled text will engage young rea
Meet the Giant Dinosaurs
β Scribed by Rebecca Donnelly
- Book ID
- 110859938
- Publisher
- Jump!, Inc.
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- en-US
- Weight
- 3 MB
- Edition
- β« Read-Along ebook. β«
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781636906102
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In this title, early fluent readers meet some of the biggest dinosaurs as they survive in their prehistoric habitats. Read along as we meet nine different creatures and learn about their hunting techniques, diets, and behaviors. Vibrant illustrations and carefully leveled text will engage young readers in a supportive educational fiction reading experience. Children can learn more about giant dinosaurs using Fact Surfer, our safe online search engine that provides relevant, age-appropriate websites. This book also features tools for teachers and caregivers, a glossary, a timeline, an index, and a table of contents.
Grasshopper Books offers simple, fun fiction for emerging readers. Meet the Giant Dinosaurs is part of Jump!'s Meet the Dinosaurs!: When Reptiles Ruled series. Glossary of key words Index Table of contents
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In this title, early fluent readers meet plant-eating dinosaurs as they survive in their prehistoric habitats. Read along as we meet nine different herbivores and learn about their diets, survival techniques, habitats, and behaviors. Vibrant illustrations and carefully leveled text will engage young
In this title, early fluent readers meet meat-eating dinosaurs as they survive in their prehistoric habitats. Read along as we meet ten different carnivores and learn about their diets, hunting techniques, habitats, and behaviors. Vibrant illustrations and carefully leveled text will engage young re
## Abstract The coalescence, seen frequently in the caudal vertebrae of the giant dinosaur __Dipiodocus longus__, has been reβexamined. A comparison with vertebral fusion in contemporary species suggests that the changes in the dinosaur were of traumatic rather than rheumatoid type.