fileadmin/content/projekte/tmeuf/unterrichtsmaterialien/um.ma-rtens.schweinswal/englisch/porpoises.pdf
a dark grey or black back. Their undersides and necks are lighter in colour, almost white. The porpoise has a fin shaped like a triangle which is located in the middle of its back. It belongs to the toothed [...] breathe through a blowhole, which is on top of their back. They have to swim up to the water’s surface in order to breathe. 5. The flipper on their back is called fin; porpoises have a triangle-shaped fin [...] not related to pigs; instead they belong to the toothed whale family. 2. Porpoises have grey-black backs and white tummies. 3. Their body shape allows porpoises to move perfectly in the water. They move
fileadmin/content/projekte/tmeuf/unterrichtsmaterialien/um.rentz.christoph.irawady.flussdelphin/englisch/teacher-infomation.pdf
fin, on the posterior end of the back. When diving, this dolphin breathes at intervals of 70-150 seconds; the head appears first and then disappears, and then the back emerges, but the tail is rarely seen
fileadmin/content/projekte/tmeuf/unterrichtsmaterialien/um.scho-ttler.rotmilan/englisch/worksheet.pdf
Folie 1 4. head 1. belly and back 5.claws 2. Tail feathers 3. wings „Make your own Robert!“ Work: Cut out and stick together! Tip: The numbers will help you! „The Robert - quiz“ 1. Mark the correct answer:
fileadmin/content/projekte/tmeuf/unterrichtsmaterialien/um.scho-ttler.rotmilan/englisch/worksheet.ppt
fileadmin/content/projekte/tmeuf/unterrichtsmaterialien/um.scho-ttler.rotmilan/englisch/teacher-information.pdf
have tagged some of us with tracking devices to find out what southbound routes we fly and if we come back in good health. People should be better informed about us so that they know how they can help. People
fileadmin/content/projekte/tmeuf/unterrichtsmaterialien/um.schulze.kreuzotter/englisch/story-for-reading.pdf
so loud and dirty and there are big machines and cars driving around everywhere. So I went quickly back home. You will not find food in the city because hunting is most successful in open areas where you [...] are taking over the open areas and driving out all the animals. Also, there are more people running back and forth across my living area. Almost all my friends have already moved on to look for a new home
fileadmin/content/projekte/tmeuf/unterrichtsmaterialien/um.tiller.saskia.trittsteinbiotop/englisch/biotope-of-stepping-stones.pdf
their own picture of the countryside. Game with stepping stones After foraging the badger wants to go back to his female badger. Can you help him? Procedure: The children are divided into two groups, and each [...] provide separated populations with a chance to combine again. They also support gene flow and enable back- settlements and new settlements. Examples are: hedges, rows of trees, banks, small bodies of water
fileadmin/content/projekte/tmeuf/unterrichtsmaterialien/um.tomforde.anna.seehund/englisch/background-information-for-the-teacher.pdf
dangerous, as pathogenic organisms can be passed on to the wild population when the animals are released back into the wild. Furthermore, the breeding of baby seals is not necessary to protect the population
fileadmin/content/projekte/tmeuf/unterrichtsmaterialien/um.wilharm.haie/englisch/teaching-material-threat-to-sharks.pdf
belly, the crescent-shaped tail fin, the triangular dorsal fin and long pectoral fins. The shark’s back is blue to grey-brown. Their large eyes and large gill slits are particularly striking (Picture 2) [...] produce fin soup from their dorsal fins. The animals have their fins cut off and then they are thrown back into the sea where they die. The process is called finning Although the soup has almost no taste and
https://www.science-story-telling.eu/en/stories/by-subject-area/physics/joule-and-energy/the-hard-work-of-experimenting-james-prescott-joule-william-thomson-and-the-mechanical-equivalent-of-heat
The hard work of experimenting Listen Manchester, in the early 1840s. Manchester was a busy industrial town in these days, actually, it could be named as the industrial cen-ter of England, and in thos