Daughter gets off and son gives the boat back on the first side of the river to the fisherman, who goes on the other side. There the daughter jumps in and goes to her brother to take him back to parents where she where the whole family meets at last returns the boat to the fisherman. The boat crossed the river 13 times.
The three columns represent the left bank, the boat, and the right bank respectively. First mom and dad - 2 minutes. Dad comes back - 3 minutes, both children go to mom - 8 minutes. Mom comes to dad - 10 minutes and they both get to their children - 12 minutes. Police Officer, Thief 2. Police Officer 3.
Police Officer, Boy 1 4. Police Officer, Thief 5. Dad, Boy 2 6. Dad 7. Dad, Mom 8. Mom 9. Police Officer, Thief Dad Mom, Dad Mom Mom, Girl 1 Police Officer, Girl 2 Police Officer Police Officer, Thief Further Discussion. There are 2 solutions: Three flowers: rose, tulip, daisy. Two flowers: carnation, geranium. Report this product Report this game to Microsoft Thanks for reporting your concern. Our team will review it and, if necessary, take action.
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Tallbots and Smallbots Level 2. Monsters and Munchkins Level 3. Choose a river crossing puzzle above. You can earn a Transum trophy for each puzzle you complete. Barbara Hermann, Monday, November 21, " What if you had a family of five is on vacation in the Netherlands with their five pet cats each person owns a cat.
Differing in size and shape, watersheds can encompass a small stream or span thousands of miles like the Mississippi River watershed. As water flows over and through the landscape, it transports materials like plastics, and often times, pollutants, moving them downstream and ultimately to the ocean. Teach your students how water moves through a watershed with these resources. Freshwater is a precious resource on the Earth's surface.
It is also home to many diverse fish, plant, and crustacean species. The habitats that freshwater ecosystems provide consist of lakes, rivers, ponds, wetlands, streams, and springs. Use these classroom resources to help students explore and learn about these places. Of that, only about 1. Most of our drinking water comes from rivers and streams.
This water is the lifeline of ecosystems around the world. A watershed is an area of land that drains rainfall and snowmelt into streams and rivers. Students label major rivers and outline watersheds on a world map. They compare the shapes of various watersheds and discuss how topography influences their shapes. Students learn the components of a watershed, identify examples of point and nonpoint source pollution, and then build a 3-D watershed model.
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Skip to content. Twitter Facebook Pinterest Google Classroom. Have students brainstorm human-environment interactions along a river. Have students arrange the River Puzzle pieces.
Have students share their rivers. Have students discuss impacts of human activity on a river. Write the following questions on the board as prompts: In what ways do people use rivers? Which activities in a riverside town could affect the river? Where along a river would water be clean for swimming or fishing?
How might farming affect the water in a river? How might building a dam or water treatment plant affect a river? What could happen to a river when a factory is nearby? Informal Assessment For the puzzle sequence, there is no one correct answer. A typical sequence of land use along a river is as follows: 1. Extending the Learning Have students use puzzle pieces, photos found online, and their own designed pieces to create river models for their own state.
Learning Objectives Students will: Brainstorm ways that humans interact with and affect local streams, rivers, and lakes in their watershed Arrange river puzzle pieces to form a realistic progression from source to mouth Describe how people have modified the environment along the river and the impacts and consequences, both positive and negative, of these changes.
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