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Karen McKelvey

Animal Jam - Meet friends, adopts pets, and play wild! - 0 views

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    Welcome to Animal Jam-a virtual world for kids where they can discover real-world plant and animal facts. Monthly subscription available.
Karen McKelvey

Make a Video. Amazing Animated Video Maker - GoAnimate. - 0 views

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    Make amazing animated videos!
Karen McKelvey

National Geographic Kids - 0 views

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    Dare to Explore! Lots to do here like play games, watch videos, learn about animals and pets and so much more.
Karen McKelvey

Screenr | Instant screencasts: Just click record - 0 views

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    Web-based screen recorder makes it a breeze to create and share your screencasts around the web. Just click the record button, capture your screen & voice, and share the link. For example, use with Storybird and published animated books.
Karen McKelvey

DogEared Book Blog - National Geographic Kids - 0 views

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    DogEared is a blog ALL about books. Good books, funny books, adventure books. Books about animals, friendship, pirates, faraway places... Books about, well, almost EVERYTHING!!
Karen McKelvey

Kerpoof Studio - 0 views

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    Kerpoof is all about having fun, discovering things, and being creative. You can make art work, make animated movies, create cards and much much more.
Karen McKelvey

Yokuts Indians - 1 views

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    "Yokuts men spent much of their time making hunting and fishing tools. Bows and arrows were built carefully to make them accurate. Young boys used a simple wooden arrow with the end sharpened to a point. With this arrow they could hunt small animals like birds and rabbits. Older boys and men made stone or bone points to put on their arrows. "
Karen McKelvey

Yurok Indian Tools | eHow - 1 views

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    "In the 1800s, Yurok Indians resided on the Pacific coast in California's northwest corner, near the mouth of the Klamath River. Yuroks depended on fishing to supply food for the tribe. Tools were fashioned from natural resources procured from the surrounding environment, including tree bark, animal bone, sinew and antlers, shells, flint and obsidian rock. "
Karen McKelvey

National Geographic Kids - 0 views

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    Tons of interesting, fun stuff to learn about.
Karen McKelvey

BBC - Schools - Dance Mat Typing - Home - 0 views

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    A fun colourful website with animation and games introducing touch typing to children aged 7 to 11
Karen McKelvey

Material Culture - 1 views

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    The Modoc used stone mortars and pestles for processing plant and animal foods. "Most large mortars were made of vesicular lava but many small one ... were of a much lighter and more porous volcanic material" (Howe 52). The Modoc also utilized a distinctive two-horned milling stone (muller) to hull wokas seeds (Kroeber 324).
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