The Antarctica Book

Living in the freezer

by Dr Mark Norman

Picture book

32 pp | Years 2–4

Student and Teacher Resources

» Getting Started

» Activities

» Assessment

Purchase book

Single copy
$16.99

Pack of four
$63.00


Getting Started

Learning for life

  • People change the environment to meet their needs, and these changes impact on and change the environment.
  • Our natural resources, like water and clean air, are precious.
  • We have a responsibility to care for and protect our environment for the future.
  • The planet's natural resources are finite.
  • Many spaces and species are threatened because of human impact on the environment.
  • Natural events affect and change the environment.
  • There are international agencies that promote environmental protection.
  • I may only be one child but I can make a difference.

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Overview

This book provides an introduction to the Antarctic environment and its inhabitants. Exquisite photographs offer an insight into a land that most of us will never see, and the text is complemented by simple yet thorough diagrams.

As we acknowledge International Polar Year from March 2007–2009, this book is a timely addition to school libraries as it introduces students to this unfamiliar place, its importance to the planet, and the threats that it may be facing.

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Author profile

Dr Mark Norman is a research scientist at Museum Victoria.

In 1986 he was the Program Co-ordinator at the Children's Museum, Museum of Victoria. Since then he has had many research roles, particularly looking at the creatures of the ocean and its shores. In 2004 he spent some time as the Senior Researcher for the Natural History Documentary Unit of ABC TV.

He has been to Antarctica many times as an ecotour lecturer and guide. On one trip, his ship was trapped in pack ice for 47 days!

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Useful websites

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Focus questions

Before reading the book

  • Where is Antarctica?
  • What do you know about it?
  • Does anything live there?
  • What would creatures living in the Antarctic need to survive?
  • Could humans live there? Why/Why not?

During reading the book

  • How does the Antarctic differ from where you live?
  • Is there anything in the introduction about Antarctica that surprises you?
  • If there is 'not a single tree in 13 million square kilometres', how do creatures survive?
  • What is the most critical element for the creatures that live in the Antarctic? Why?

After reading the book

  • Why is the Antarctic critical to a healthy planet?
  • What would be some of the consequences for the planet, if global warming continues as predicted?
  • Why are nations such as Kiribati so concerned?
  • How do the glossary and index assist you in reading this book?

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