Slideshow

الاثنين، 30 ديسمبر 2019

❄❄❄ This Winter, Discover the New Sock Helping Millions With Pain ❄❄❄




Click here to learn more!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
First Class Consumer
PO Box 4354
Columbus OH 43209
United States

You may unsubscribe here.

Vision. Tenacity. Ingenuity. These are accompanied by the many traits of the trailblazing female National Geographic Explorers who are advancing the frontiers of science, exploration, and conservation featured in Januarys matter of trailblazer magazine, the National Geographic Societys classroom magazine for grades K-5/6. The second annual Women in Science matter celebrates the important play-act of conservationist Kim Williams-Guilln, geoarchaeologist Beverly Goodman, and ecologist Dominique Gonalvesall driven by a fierce goal to benefits our pact of our world and back up fine-tune it for the better. Kim Williams-Guilln works to save sea turtles in Costa Rica and Nicaragua by outwitting egg poachers. following the use of a 3D printer, she developed artificial sea turtle eggs containing GPS-enabled technology to track the movements of wildlife poachers from the sea turtles nests to where the eggs are finally sold for food. Through this unique invention, Kim is helping to occupy in knowledge gaps about the illegal wildlife trafficking trade in Central America. Beverly Goodman combines archaeology, geology, and anthropology to question the obscure ways plants and humans impact coastlines. Her play-act focuses on the causes and effects of ancient environmental events following tsunamis and floods to improved understand which coasts are at greatest risk and what nice of broken to expect. As Beverly describes it, The following is a window into the future, and by reconstructing the histories of our coastlines we can know what could be waiting for us in the future. Dominique Gonalves manages and protects elephants in Gorongosa National Park in Mozambiqueone of the greatest areas of plant and animal sparkle in Africa. She investigates the elephants movements, quarters use, and warfare following humans. Dominique is afterward severely effective to community onslaught and disrupting conventional gender roles. She works following the parks Girls Club program to empower pubertal women by promoting education and healthy lifestyle practices. These remarkable women are not unaided making obscure contributions to science, exploration, and education, they are afterward breaking supplementary barriers, said National Geographic action direction Vice President and Chief Education commissioner Vicki Phillips. When we tutor pubertal people about real-world pioneers and role models, we enable them to question options exceeding what they thought was doable and, in play-act so, raise and inspire the learning environment. In the first Women in Science special issue, trailblazer magazine commended three generations of women whose play-act has already left an indelible impact on their fields of study, including the legendary primatologist Jane Goodall, linguist Sandhya Narayanan, and polar trailblazer Jade Hameister. Last years Women in Science matter essentially resonated following our readers, said trailblazer Managing Editor Brenna Maloney. Telling the stories of effective scientists and explorers inspires all of our pubertal readers. But we torment yourself for our pubertal women readers, in particular, to see themselves in our pages. Dominique, Beverly, and Kim were just following for that reason many of them. If they can reach it, subsequently our readers can, too. To continue to celebrate National Geographic women on the tummy lines of science and exploration throughout the year, the trailblazer magazine team afterward created a poster-sized, 12-month encyclopedia straightforward to magazine subscribers. This special edition will be straightforward for grades 2 (Lexile levels 250L-550L), 3 (350-750L), 4 (450L-850L), and 5/6 (520L-950L). Spring subscriptions are straightforward until November 15. The deadline for digital subscriptions is January 15. More suggestion is straightforward at ExplorerMag.org. NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC WOMEN OF IMPACT National Geographic has a long archives of investing in bold people following transformative ideas. We continue to invest in intrepid female scientists, explorers, educators, and storytellers who have forged ahead into the unknownsometimes at great riskto bring back up their findings, experiences, and stories. To mark the centennial of U.S. women having the right to vote, National Geographic launched a year-long project celebrating womens impact in the world. The November 2019 matter of National Geographic magazine is enormously dedicated to women and, for the first era ever, all of the magazines content was written and photographed exclusively by women. National Geographic afterward released the book, Women: The National Geographic Image Collection, containing 450 startling photographs of women drawn from their unparalleled image archives. Additionally, a selection of the books most powerful images are now on display at the National Geographic Museum in Washington. D.C. The images featured in the Women: A Century of Change exhibition span nine decades and sky the lives of women from more than 30 countries following each image offering a glimpse into the lives of women worldwide. [RANDOM_CONTENT:] See the November matter at natgeo.com/WomenofImpact and associate the conversation at #NatGeoWomenofImpact.