Showing posts with label Typography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Typography. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 1, 2020

What Is A Dinosaur?

This chart is the Dinosaur Family Tree from the 1950s.
New Study Restructures the Dinosaur Family Tree
       What is a dinosaur? Would you say that a dinosaur is a gigantic monster that lived long, long ago? Well, that answer isn't exactly correct because the word monster is sometimes used tor a mythical animal. Dinosaur is a popular name for certain reptiles that lived during the Mesozoic era. We know that the prehistoric animals called dinosaurs really lived because of the many fossil skeletons that have been found.
       Among the dinosaurs were many different-looking animals, and some were not very closely related to one another. For example, the dinosaur Brontosaurus was no more closely related to the dinosaur Stegosaurus than a cow is to a horse. Not all the dinosaurs were giants. The first dinosaurs were very small, some of them no larger than chickens.
       The earliest known dinosaur in our country was about eight feet long. He is called Coelophysis (see-lo-FYE-sis) and he lived during the last part of the Triassic period. His fossil skeletons have been found in northern New Mexico. Most of his eight-foot length was made up by a long, slender tail. He was very lightly built and perhaps weighed no more than fifty pounds. Because of his light build he was probably able to run very fast. His small front legs were equipped with claws that were useful in grasping and tearing food. His teeth were sharp and he probably preyed on small reptiles. He walked on his hind legs.
       It is a very important to remember that the earliest dinosaurs walked on their hind legs. As the dinosaurs continued to develop, some of them grew larger and heavier and came down on their front legs to support themselves better. Because of this, most of these dinosaurs had an arched back and shorter front legs than hind legs. But there was a dinosaur called Brachiosaurus that is an exception.
       Paleontologists, the scientists who study prehistoric animals, have divided the dinosaur family into two large groups. One group is named the reptile hips - and the other the bird hips - because their hip bones resemble in arrangement the hip bones of either reptiles or birds. The reptile-hipped dinosaurs included both plant-eaters and meat-eaters, but the bird hipped dinosaurs were all plant-eaters.
       Some of the reptile-hipped dinosaurs walked on their large muscular hind legs and used their front legs only for grasping. Many of these dinosaurs were very large and weighed eight or more tons, and some were very small. We know that nearly all of them were meat-eaters because they had long, sharp, pointed teeth. The gigantic four-legged forms in the reptile-hipped group, such as Brontosaurus and Brachiosaurus, had very long tails, long necks, and small heads. They had spoon-shaped or peg-like teeth and were plant-eaters.
       The armored dinosaurs or the plated dinosaurs and the horned dinosaurs, and the duck-billed dinosaurs all belong to the group of bird-hipped dinosaurs. All the bird-hipped dinosaurs were plant-eaters. Some of them walked on four legs, others only on their hind legs. Most of these dinosaurs developed spectacular structures for defense against their enemies, the meat-eating dinosaurs. Some had long, sharp horns. Others had double rows of fan-shaped plates up their backs and spikes on their tails. Others had bony plates over the body, spikes along the sides of the body, and a long club-like tail. And still others had duck-like bills and bony crests or long tubes extending back from the top of their heads.
       In what parts of the world did the dinosaurs live? Fossil skeletons of dinosaurs have been found all over the world and on nearly every continent. The largest number of dinosaur skeletons and some of the most interesting kinds have been found right in our own country. The first dinosaur skeleton found in the United States was at Haddonfield, New Jersey, but most of the skeletons have been found in Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and New Mexico. At Dinosaur National Monument near Jensen, Utah, you can see parts of dinosaur skeletons sticking out of the rocks. At the time that the dinosaurs were alive, our planet looked much different than it does today.

Tuesday, May 19, 2020

Bird Topography Posters

        These bird topography posters are excellent for teaching you and your dolls about bird anatomy. Print them out and hang them on the cabin walls of your doll camp meeting rooms.

Sunday, February 23, 2020

Free Printable Food Posters...

       A food pyramid or diet pyramid is a pyramid-shaped diagram representing the optimal number of servings to be eaten each day from each of the basic food groups.
       The first food pyramid was published in Sweden in 1974. The food pyramid introduced by the United States Department of Agriculture in the year 1992 was called the "Food Guide Pyramid". It was updated in 2005 and then replaced by MyPlate in 2011.
       The USDA food pyramid was created in 1992 and divided into six horizontal sections containing depictions of foods from each section's food group. It was updated in 2005 with colorful vertical wedges replacing the horizontal sections and renamed MyPyramid. MyPyramid was often displayed with the food images absent, creating a more abstract design. In an effort to restructure food nutrition guidelines, the USDA rolled out its new MyPlate program in June 2011. My Plate is divided into four slightly different sized quadrants, with fruits and vegetables taking up half the space, and grains and protein making up the other half. The vegetables and grains portions are the largest of the four.

Click to download the largest size and color a doll poster about vitamins and their benefits.
Vitamin "A" prevents eye diseases, Vitamin "B" prevents Beri-Beri. Vitamin "C" prevents
Scurvy. Vitamin "D" prevents Rickets. Vitamin "E" prevents Sterility. and 
Vitamin "G" prevents Pellagra.
There are six basic food groups:
  1. Vegetables. A vegetable is a part of a plant consumed by humans that is generally savory but is not sweet. A vegetable is not considered a grain, fruit, nut, spice, or herb. For example, the stem, root, flower, etc., may be eaten as vegetables. Vegetables contain many vitamins and minerals; however, different vegetables contain different spreads, so it is important to eat a wide variety of types. For example, green vegetables typically contain vitamin A, dark orange and dark green vegetables contain vitamin C, and vegetables like broccoli and related plants contain iron and calcium. Vegetables are very low in fats and calories, but ingredients added in preparation can often add these.
  2. Grains. These foods provide complex carbohydrates, which are an important source of energy, especially for a low-fat meal plan.
  3. Fruits. In terms of food (rather than botany), fruits are the sweet-tasting seed-bearing parts of plants, or occasionally sweet parts of plants which do not bear seeds. These include apples, oranges, grapes, bananas, etc. Fruits are low in calories and fat and are a source of natural sugars, fiber and vitamins. Processing fruits when canning or making into juices may add sugars and remove nutrients. The fruit food group is sometimes combined with the vegetable food group. Note that a massive number of different plant species produce seed pods which are considered fruits in botany, and there are a number of botanical fruits which are conventionally not considered fruits in cuisine because they lack the characteristic sweet taste, e.g., tomatoes or avocados.
  4. Oils and Sweets. A food pyramid's tip is the smallest part, so the fats and sweets in the top of the Food Pyramid should comprise the smallest percentage of your daily diet. The foods at the top of the food pyramid should be eaten sparingly because they provide calories but not much in the way of nutrition. These foods include salad dressings, oils, cream, butter, margarine, sugars, soft drinks, candies and sweet desserts.
  5. Dairy. Dairy products are produced from the milk of mammals, usually but not exclusively cattle. They include milk, yogurt and cheese. Milk and its derivative products are a rich source of dietary calcium and also provide protein, phosphorus, vitamin A, and vitamin D. However, many dairy products are high in saturated fat and cholesterol compared to vegetables, fruits and whole grains, which is why skimmed products are available as an alternative. Historically, adults were recommended to consume three cups of dairy products per day. More recently, evidence is mounting that dairy products have greater levels of negative effects on health than previously thought and confer fewer benefits. For example, recent research has shown that dairy products are not related to stronger bones or less fractures.
  6. Meat and beans. Meat is the tissue‚ usually muscle‚ of an animal consumed by humans. Since most parts of many animals are edible, there is a vast variety of meats. Meat is a major source of protein, as well as iron, zinc, and vitamin B12. Meats, poultry, and fish include beef, chicken, pork, salmon, tuna, shrimp, and eggs. The meat group is one of the major compacted food groups in the food guide pyramid. Many of the same nutrients found in meat can also be found in foods like eggs, dry beans, and nuts, such foods are typically placed in the same category as meats, as meat alternatives. These include tofu, products that resemble meat or fish but are made with soy, eggs, and cheeses.
       These free pyramid food posters are from the United States government. You may print them out for your doll classrooms or doctor's office. Learn all about the health benefits of food while playing with your dolls! The posters here are only available in English.

The 1992 Pyramid Poster.

The Basic Seven Poster in black and white.

The colorful Food Guide Poster.

The 2005 My Food Pyramid Poster.

Saturday, August 10, 2019

Body Diagrams and Atlas Charts for Doll Physicians

Left, We recommend, "The Body Atlas" for older children by Steve Parker. 
Full of anatomical illustrations for young students interested in learning about human 
anatomy. Right, we cut up the book jacket only, to paste it's clip art onto cardstock 
and to use these small posters in our doll's clinic.

       Print, cut and paste an anatomy chart  or medical illustration onto cardboard for a doll doctor's office using the free clip art below. A medical illustration is a form of biological illustration that helps to record and disseminate medical, anatomical, and related knowledge.
      Below are two diagrams of the body in black and white and one in full color. Gender is not included in the illustrations. 
       Children may print them out and hang them inside their doll hospital rooms, doll doctor's office, patient waiting rooms etc... Illustrations here are for play only. Do not take them and give them away from alternative websites or sell them for profit folks.
Body diagram, includes organs, front view, in black and white
Body diagram includes organs, in black and white, back view.
Body Atlas, frontal view, in full color.