Spot the shapes on top of rolling waves and on sandy shores. This sea-based early learning selection features rhyme and repetition, as well as a full page summarizing the shapes for reinforced learning.
Shapes are generally our first encounter with math. Geometry skills are learned from an early age, and readers build upon those first geometry lessons with topics like describing objects using the names of shapes, identifying both two-dimensional and three-dimensional shapes, and composing shapes. Readers are able to explore these essential concepts independently through easy-to-follow text and colorful images of both new and familiar shapes. By exploring a boat, readers practice identifying shapes of various orientations and sizes. Reflecting the Common Core State Standards for Mathematics, this book addresses standard K.G.A.2. This book should be paired with "Finding Shapes at the Fair" (9781477719558) from the InfoMax Math Readers Program to provide the alternative point of view on the same topic.
Callie and her friends are so excited! They just entered a contest to see who could build the best rocket ship in the school. While designing the rocket, they learned how to identify both flat and solid shapes. Concepts include counting and naming the sides, corners and faces of geometric shapes. Did Callie’s group win the contest? You will have to read to find out!
Explore the layers of Pirate Ship, from keel to crow's nest. Inside this book lurks a terror of the seven seas! Press out the cleverly shaped chunky pages to reveal the decks of a pirate ship! Explore your very own vessel, from keel to crow's nest, and discover astonishing facts about the pirating life. Complete with press-out cannons, mast, and scoundrel crew, this is a book, 3D model and play scene all rolled into one.
This is an anthology of twenty-seven World War I-era essays, by various authors, on ship camouflage from that time period. It focuses primarily on American and British camouflage, and especially on "dazzle camouflage," a counter-intuitive method in which brightly colored abstract shapes were applied to the ship's surface. The purpose of such camouflage was not low visibility, but to make it difficult to aim a torpedo at a distant, moving ship from a submerged submarine (U-boat), while peering through a periscope. The book includes 275 drawings, diagrams and vintage photographs, and a 40-page camouflage bibiliography, the largest ever.
Rawson and Tupper's Basic Ship Theory, first published in 1968, is widely known as the standard introductory text for naval architecture students, as well as being a useful reference for the more experienced designer. The fifth edition continues to provide a balance between theory and practice. Volume 1 discusses ship geometry and measurement in its more basic concepts, also covering safety issues, structural strength, flotation, trim and stability. Volume 2 expands on the material in Volume 1, covering the dynamics behaviour of marine vehicles, hydrodynamics, manoeuvrability and seakeeping. It concludes with some case studies of particular ship types and a discussion of maritime design. Both volumes feature the importance of considering the environment in design.Basic Ship Theory is an essential tool for undergraduates and national vocational students of naval architecture, maritime studies, ocean and offshore engineering, and this combined hardback version will be of great assistance to practising marine engineers and naval architects. - Brand new edition of the leading undergraduate textbook in Naval Architecture - Provides a basis for more advanced theory - Over 500 examples, with answers