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Monday 22 July 2019

Animal mnemonic

New words from reading
 Tuesday 23rd July 2019

Big idea: within each kingdom there are more different groups that classify animals. 

  • Prokaryotes - a name of a kingdom 
  • Etc means etcetera
  • Interbreed - when two different animals have babies together

Mnemonics help us remember hard things, for example NEVER EAT SOGGY WEETBIX helps us remember North East South West. 

This is the mnemonic i learnt to help me remember the order:
Keep Ponds Clean or Fish Gets Sick
Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order 
Family
Genus

Species    

Sunday 21 July 2019

Animal kingdom

New words from animal kingdom reading
Monday’s reading

  • Organism - a living thing
  • Vertebrate - has a spine
  • Invertebrate - has no spine 
  • Taxonomy - a way to group things
  • Diverse - a big range 
  • Amphibians - 
  • Heterotrophic - means they must find and eat food
  • Primates (apes, monkeys)
  • Rodents (rats, squirrels)
  • Cetaceans (dolphins, whales)
  • Marsupials (kangaroos, koalas)
  • Monotremes (egg laying mammals like the platypus)
  • Autotrophic - make their own food by photosynthesis
  • Photosynthesis - how plants make their own food
  • Vascular - uses roots to absorb water
  • Nonvascular - uses the whole plant to absorb water
  • Decompose, decomposition - to break down
  • Non-flowering - no flowers 
  • Thermophiles - (root word is thermo which is about temperature) 

Big ideas from the reading 
  • All living things are called organisms. 
  • They are organised into 6 groups called kingdoms. Each group has certain characteristics that each organism must have. 
  • Animals
    • Can move on their own
    • Are heterotrophic (can’t make their own food)
    • Must eat to survive
    • Vertebrates and invertebrates 
  • Plants 
  • They are Autotrophic (they make their own food)
  • Some are vascular and nonvascular. 
  • If a plant has seeds or fruit, it is a flowering plant.
  • Eubacteria
  • Are made up of just one cell. They are everywhere. Some bacteria are good and some are bad.
  • Bacteria called decomposers break down dead plants and anacteria.
Archaebacteria
  • Can survive where no other organism can live.
  • Thermophiles, methanogens and halophiles
Fungi 
  • Say it fun guy
  • Mushrooms are a fungi
  • They are heterotrophic (can’a make their own food)
  • Use enzymes to break down food

Protista 
  • Are related to either plants, animals or fungi (one of them, not related to all of them at the same time)

Monday 1 July 2019

Joan Wiffen information report

Brainstorm and plan. 

Joan Wiffen
Structure
Topic 
Words and ideas to use
Introduction 


Paragraph 2
Early life 
Born in ??
Lived where??
Married to…?? KIds??
What was her job??

First fossil she ever had was given an Ammonite (fossil of an ancient squid) that made her interested in finding fossils.
Paragraph 3
Discovering fossils 
First in NZ. 1975. Mangahouanga Stream in Hawke’s Bay. dinosaur tailbone from a theropod.  From six different species. Joan and family and friends. 

Fossils were in rocks, used some special tools to split the rocks open, carried it to her car. 
Paragraph 4
Changing ideas about fossils
An Australian paleontologist Dr Ralph Molnar confirmed it was a dinosaur bone in 1980. 

Other people started looking for fossils and found some - page 24.
Paragraph 5
Later life
Honorary doctorate in 1994. 
Died in ??

She is remembered - her fossils are kept safe. Some are at the University of Auckland, some are at National Paleontological collections at GNS Science in Lower hutt. The first one she found is on display at Te Papa. 
Conclusion 


Joan Wiffen is a famous New Zealand dinosaur hunter.

Joan Wiffen was born on the 4th of Feb 1922. She was married to a man named Pont Wiffen and they two kids. Her famous job was to be a palaeontologist and she was a person who hunts dinosaurs and she studied ancient thing about animals.

In 1975,Joan Wiffen found the first dinosaur fossil in New Zealand,a small piece of a dinosaurs tailbone from a theropod dinosaur,she found it in a rock at Mangahounga stream in Hawke’s Bay. Joan Wiffen got some special tools to crack the rock open and grab the fossil out of the rock. Joan and her family went to find more dinosaur fossils and people started to do the same thing,she found six dinosaur fossils from different species. 

In 1980, an Australian paleontologist named Dr Ralph Molnar confirmed the bone that Joan had found was indeed a dinosaur fossil.  

Joan Wiffen and her family and her friends found six different kinds of dinosaur bones at Mangahounga stream, inland Hawke’s Bay. Other people started looking for fossils. A man named Brendan Hayes found a very small finger bone of a theropod dinosaur at South of Port Waikato (in the cliffs along the coast). Another man named Dr Greg Browne found a dinosaur footprint at Northwest Nelson,even a another man found several dinosaur bones (sauropod and theropod) at Tioriori, Chatham Island.

Joan Wiffen received an honorary doctorate in 1994. She died on the 30th of June 2009,people remember her by reading books about her amazing journey.