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Josie Timblin Dusti Schulz Sec. Reading 4-21-09 Museum Photomontage 4-30-09
African Wildlife
They gathers in water to keep cool. They sleep under water by closing their nostrils and ears to keep water from seeping in.
Males are larger and than the females. The females take care of the males by grooming them. They also are the hunters of the species, and they are referred to as lionesses.
This picture was taken on the bus ride back to KCHS after our museum trip. These are the teachers that chaperoned our trip: Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Hefferan and Mrs. Ferguson.
This is Josie Timblin and Dusti Schulz at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History. The canoe we are sitting in is a replica of one used by the Iroquois Indians.
Mrs. Smith’s Secondary Reading class is sitting in front of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History along Forbes Avenue in Pittsburgh.
There are two main types of grasslands to support animal life: Tropical where many ants and termites exist and the savannah where big herds of animals produce dung that helps the grass grow.
Bushbabies are also known as galagos and are related to pottos, also in Africa. They have large eyes to help them see in the dark.
If you want to know more about the Hall of African wildlife visit here, at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, PA. Our Secondary Reading Class from KCHS visited this museum on April 21, 2009.