Evy is elated. She gets an entire weekend hanging out with her best friends, both horse and human, with no adults around. All they have to do is take care of the cattle – and eat tons of cake and go for rides and basically do anything they feel like doing. What could be better? Maybe if that big grizzly bear didn’t decide a cow would make a nice dinner... And the cattle didn’t stampede... And the only way to escape from the bear is across the ice covered lake...
SCIENCE IS A GREAT AREA TO TEACH, BECAUSE CHILDREN HAVE A NATURAL CURIOSITY ABOUT THE WORLD. THEY WANT TO KNOW WHY AND HOW THINGS WORK, WHAT THINGS ARE MADE OF, AND WHERE THEY CAME FROM.
After discovering her father traded her in a deal with the underwater creatures of Venice, sixteen-year-old Liona runs away from home to become a magician's assistant, but she may have traded one kind of monster for another.
Following Russia's aggressive war in Ukraine, the world is suddenly gripped by concerns over energy security. And yet, there is an even greater threat ahead – one that is much more likely to shape the events of the twenty-first century than the competition for oil or gas. The combination of an ever-increasing global population, climate change, industrialisation, urbanisation and limited natural resources means that one difficulty, above all, will shape the political, economic and security environment in the years ahead: that is water. If people and nations will fight for fossil fuels, it is nothing compared to what they will do for the most vital natural resource of all. As both a citizen who has supported water charities and worked in the NHS and a politician who has dealt with security and economic issues, Liam Fox tells the story of water and the problems it presents in a more complete way than ever before. The Coming Storm unites a range of concerns that are often written about separately but seldom together and provides a comprehensible and compelling call for urgent action.
This volume represents a practical survey of current understanding of chemical contamination of the Mediterranean Sea. Beginning with an overview of the general physical and socio-economic context, the author reviews the exploration of processes governing the fate of chemicals, assesses the budget of both inorganic and organic contaminants, and describes new tools for studying the impact of pollution on the Mediterranean.