A couple books show how animals see the world...
Animal Eyes
by Mary
Holland
32 pages;
ages 4-8
Arbordale
Publishing, 2015
Eyes come in
different sizes, shapes, and colors. We depend on our eyes to find things, to
recognize friends, to read a story. Animals depend on their eyes to find food,
recognize their families, and understand the world around them.
Filled with
photos, Mary Holland shows a diversity of animal eyes. She shows the difference
between predator eyes and prey eyes. She discusses simple eyes and compound
eyes. Her photos include night eyes and day eyes, eyes with special eyelids,
and animals with more than two eyes.
Back matter
includes fun facts and a matching game.
Eye to Eye:
How Animals See The World
by Steve
Jenkins
32 pages;
ages 6-9
Houghton
Mifflin Harcourt, 2014
Jenkins
reinforces the message that we rely on vision to understand the world around
us. Most animals do – but what they see may be different than what we see. Between
the covers of his book, Jenkins introduces you to animals with more than 100
eyeballs and animals with eyes on the tips of their toes. You discover that
some animals can look in two directions at the same time, and meet one creature
with eyes the size of a basketball.
Jenkins uses
realistic cut-and-torn–paper images to show blue eyes, orange eyes, black eyes
and gold, eyes on stalks and tops of heads, eyes that see barest shadows and
eyes that can see a rabbit from two miles away. At the back there’s a handy
explanation on how eyes evolved, and some cool facts about each animal
mentioned – plus a glossary.
Bees see the world in a totally different way than we do. Not only do they have compound eyes, but they see in the ultraviolet spectrum. You can watch a video about how bees can see the invisible world here.
Today is STEM Friday - head over to the STEM Friday blog to see what other bloggers are talking about. Review copies provided by publisher.
Today is STEM Friday - head over to the STEM Friday blog to see what other bloggers are talking about. Review copies provided by publisher.
I haven't seen Animal Eyes yet, but will check it out. Eye to Eye is a real stunner. Thanks for these reviews.
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