With five flaps to lift - this book is full of surprises to make you giggle. Who will be your favourite Moo-Cow? Will it be the Glitter-Glue-Cow or the Kangaroo-Cow? Lift the flaps to find out. There's a Moo-Cow for everyone in this fantastically colourful sequel to the hugely popular OCTOPUS SOCKTOPUS and ELEPHANT WELLYPHANT
Pull the tabs and lift the flaps - who will be your favourite octopus? Will it be the Cuckoo Clocktopus, the Scary Shocktopus or maybe even the Party Frocktopus? There's an octopus for everyone in this fantastically colourful sequel to the hugely popular ELEPHANT WELLYPHANT, shortlisted for the Roald Dahl Funny Prize. "Simple yet wonderful" WATERSTONE'S BOOKS QUARTERLY
"Simple yet wonderful" Waterstones Books Quarterly A BRILLIANT BOARD BOOK FROM BESTSELLING AUTHOR-ILLUSTRATOR, NICK SHARRATT. Lift the flaps to reveal your favourite elephant! Will it be the Fruit Jellyphant, Cinderellaphant, or maybe the stinky Rude Smelliphant? There's an elephantfor everyonein this utterlyoriginal comic masterpiece. Now in a handy board book editionthat's perfectfor young children. Collect them all: Moo-Cow Kung-Fu Cow, Octopus Socktopusand Elephant Wellyphant.
There's a party at the farmyard, and it's going to be fancy dress. Children will love lifting the flaps to discover which animals are hiding behind the disguises. Pig's come as a pirate, Duck as a superhero and Sheep as a wizard. Nick Sharratt's new book combines all those toddler favourites: peek-a-boo flaps to lift, bouncy rhyming text and lots of animal noises to join in with.
Everyone loves a trip to the Zoopermarket, and this one is stocked with all kinds of strange treats. From fangtastic salt-and-finager crisps, to ape-ricot dessert and prickled onions (ouch!), food here is never what it seems... but you'll always have a WILD time! Nick Sharratt's bold pictures and brilliant pop-ups are a perfect way encourage little ones to love sharing books.
The 3rd edition of this successful textbook continues to build on the strengths that were recognized by a 2008 Textbook Excellence Award from the Text and Academic Authors Association (TAA). Materials Chemistry addresses inorganic-, organic-, and nano-based materials from a structure vs. property treatment, providing a suitable breadth and depth coverage of the rapidly evolving materials field — in a concise format. The 3rd edition offers significant updates throughout, with expanded sections on sustainability, energy storage, metal-organic frameworks, solid electrolytes, solvothermal/microwave syntheses, integrated circuits, and nanotoxicity. Most appropriate for Junior/Senior undergraduate students, as well as first-year graduate students in chemistry, physics, or engineering fields, Materials Chemistry may also serve as a valuable reference to industrial researchers. Each chapter concludes with a section that describes important materials applications, and an updated list of thought-provoking questions.
Yeasts are the active agents responsible for three of our most important foods - bread, wine, and beer - and for the almost universally used mind/ personality-altering drug, ethanol. Anthropologists have suggested that it was the production of ethanol that motivated primitive people to settle down and become farmers. The Earth is thought to be about 4. 5 billion years old. Fossil microorganisms have been found in Earth rock 3. 3 to 3. 5 billion years old. Microbes have been on Earth for that length of time carrying out their principal task of recycling organic matter as they still do today. Yeasts have most likely been on Earth for at least 2 billion years before humans arrived, and they playa key role in the conversion of sugars to alcohol and carbon dioxide. Early humans had no concept of either microorganisms or fermentation, yet the earliest historical records indicate that by 6000 B. C. they knew how to make bread, beer, and wine. Earliest humans were foragers who col lected and ate leaves, tubers, fruits, berries, nuts, and cereal seeds most of the day much as apes do today in the wild. Crushed fruits readily undergo natural fermentation by indigenous yeasts, and moist seeds germinate and develop amylases that produce fermentable sugars. Honey, the first con centrated sweet known to humans, also spontaneously ferments to alcohol if it is by chance diluted with rainwater. Thus, yeasts and other microbes have had a long history of 2 to 3.