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Jeff and Danielle return from Africa on their 15th birthday and are grounded. They did drive around for months without a license, after all. The twins receive their motorcycle permits and are grounded again. For saving lives? They grieve loss and celebrate joy. Join them for excitement and adventure as they use their SEAL skills, move to a new city and public school, undertake an underwater rescue at sea, plan for a year in Australia, and more. Through it all, their faith is challenged and continues to grow. Oh, and by the way, Jeff has a new girlfriend.
Jeff and Danielle spend their senior year in high school in Australia, leaving all their worries in the US behind. Right? Apparently not—Australia is keeping them as active as all their years at home. Adjusting to a new school system proves easier than expected, but unanticipated challenges arise. The movie they have planned needs much care and consultation and takes a surprising turn. And trouble has followed them across half the world and rears its head in unexpected ways. On the good side, Danielle has a boyfriend, her first. And Jeff has a girlfriend, not his first, but perhaps his next love. So many questions are answered, but others, big ones, appear on the horizon. On such a huge continent, how can the distances be conquered? Has Jeff found his forever love? Will the true story of Jeff and Danielle’s relationship come out? What about their pilot certificates? And the movie they want to make? University decisions loom . . . And is crime boss Owen getting involved in their lives too much—way too much?
With the possibility of being foreign exchange students in their future (Australia, here we come!), Jeff and Danielle have much to accomplish. Some things they have planned for, but as usual, there are many surprises along the way—some good, some bad, and some downright dangerous! Musicals, cruises, a bear attack, another visit to Africa, and romance find the twins using their wits, skills, and their faith to conquer all, or almost all.
Oki and his little sister Kallik come upon a baby seal when out hunting one cold morning.
"Developed by literacy experts for students in kindergarten through grade three, this book introduces baby seals to young readers through leveled text and related photos"--
On the Arctic ice, a mother harp seal gives birth to her pup. Camouflaged against the ice by its white fur, the helpless pup sticks close to mom, feeding on her rich milk. So begins the life of a harp seal pup. In this coming-of-age introduction to these adorable marine mammals, readers will learn that after just two weeks, the mother seal abandons her pup and returns to the sea. The little pup waits alone on the ice for its white baby coat to be replaced by gray fur, and then, at just a few weeks old, it dives into the freezing sea to find its own food and begin its ocean-dwelling life. The colorful interior spreads and gorgeous photos of fluffy, white seal pups are sure to delight emergent readers.
Did you know that mother seals give birth to only one seal pup? Watch how seal pups eat and grow until they set out on their own.
There are many kinds of baby seals, in a variety of different sizes and colors. Beginning readers discover that all of these different kinds of baby seals really do have a lot in common. Fun facts, written in accessible language, explain where baby seals are born, what they eat, and even how they swim. Vibrant photographs show the many types of these beautiful baby animals in their natural habitat.
While entranced by the seals that swim off the shore of the Maine island she visits during holidays, sixth grader Molly befriends an interesting girl her age who seems different from other humans.
An in-depth look at genetic alteration in the natural world and the oppositions to it, seen through the case study of a gene drive for malaria. May We Make the World? is an engaging reflection on the history, nature, goal, and meaning of using a new technological idea—CRISPR-based genetic engineering—to alter the genome of the mosquito that carries malaria. This technology, called a “gene drive,” can alter the sex ratio in Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes, the key vector for falciparum, the deadliest form of malaria. P. Falciparum kills 400,000 people a year, largely the poorest children in the world among them. In her sobering examination of the issue, Laurie Zoloth considers the leading ethical arguments for and against gene drives, explores the regulatory efforts that have emerged long in advance of the science, and considers the philosophical questions raised by the struggle to eliminate malaria. The development of a gene drive for malaria will have far-reaching implications for it represents the first use of genetic engineering in the natural world and the first creation of a genetic variant intended to spread in the African wild beyond human control. Drawing on two decades of work, Zoloth brilliantly argues that we can understand the complex moral issues at stake only by carefully reflecting on the science, the nature of the local and global discourse about genetic engineering, and the long history of malaria, which—as it transformed from a worldwide disease to a tropical one—reshaped the world as we know it.