logo
 
         
Additional Search Results 1 - 5 of 5 for Baboons
1.   Hunting and Gathering in the African Rain Forest
...re to buy food, so the Mbuti must find their own food. Some hunt with bows, others fish. 4. Show pictures of the rain forest from the books. Explain how large many of the trees are and that they are very close together, with lots of undergrowth. Some of the animals that live in the rain forest are: baboons, squirrels, frogs, lizards, snakes, bees, bats, humming birds, birds, moths, fish, beetles, caterpillars, rodents, monkeys, parrots, tortoises, termites, and snails. Big game is rare in the rain forest. Some plants they eat are: palm fruit and oil, bananas, fruits, and nuts. Many of the people also...

2.   Monkey See, Monkey Do
learning/teacher/bg_teacher.gif) Back to Main Daily Lesson Related Article Plan No Time for Lesson Plan Bullies: Baboons Archive Retool Their News Snapshot Culture Issues in Depth By NATALIE ANGIER On This Day in History (Go to Article.) Crossword Puzzle Campus Weblines Education News Get Our Lessons By E-mailPrinter-friendly Version Newspaper in Education (NIE) Teacher Resources Classroom Tuesday, April 13, 2004 Subs...

3.   Cosmology Different Stories
...small mammals stride into daylight moving quickly to occupy available ecological niches. Over the course of the next 60 million years Earth greets rodents, whales, monkeys, horses, cats and dogs, antelopes, gibbons, grazing animals, orangutans, gorillas, elephants, chimpanzees, camels, bears, pigs, baboons and the first humans. The Age of Mammals! (20) 4 million years ago, Huminoids leave the forest, stand up, and walk on two legs. The savanna offers the challenges and opportunities for these early creatures to evolve into humans. They move over the surface of the Earth eventually spreading themselves...

4.   Safety in Numbers
...y researchers? 3. Working in small groups or individually, students choose a primate species for which they will conduct research and explore known social behavior patterns. Students may choose from any of the following primates: apes (e.g. gibbons, orangutans, chimpanzees, gorillas), monkeys (e.g. baboons, or mandrills), or prosimians (e.g. tree shrews and lemurs) known as 'lower primates.' There are approximately 235 known species of primates. Using all available resources students investigate the answers to the following questions (written on the board for easier student access): -What is this prim...

5.   Primate Primer
...ola? 3. As a class, brainstorm a list on the board of the types of animals that belong in the primate family. Student responses might include chimpanzees, monkeys, gorillas, orangutans, gibbons, mandrills, lemurs, lorises, bushbabies, tarsiers, guenons, colubuses, capuchins, marmosets, tamarins and baboons. Each student should select one of the listed species to research. Multiple students may focus on the same species. In initial research, students will need to select one particular type of primate within the species, and no two students should investigate the same type. For example, students selecti...


Result Pages:   1

Copyright © 2010 Lesson Corner. All rights reserved.