Fountaindale Public Library

Super small, miniature marvels of the natural world, by Tiffany Stone ; illustrated by Ashley Spires

Label
Super small, miniature marvels of the natural world, by Tiffany Stone ; illustrated by Ashley Spires
Language
eng
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
no index present
Intended audience
AD600L, Lexile
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Super small
Oclc number
1338196215
Responsibility statement
by Tiffany Stone ; illustrated by Ashley Spires
Sub title
miniature marvels of the natural world
Summary
"From a bestselling illustrator, this utterly unique comic-style book for kids 4 to 8 explores super-small creatures with astounding abilities. Did you know that some of the smallest creatures on Earth have real-life superpowers? The minute oribatid mite can lift more than 1,000 times its own weight. A tiny type of salamander (called an axolotl) can regrow body parts. And the almost microscopic tardigrade? It can survive practically anywhere, even in outer space! Acclaimed author Tiffany Stone combines comic panels and poems to share incredible facts about our world's miniature marvels, while illustrator Ashley Spires' zany cartoon-style illustrations make these itty-bitty superheroes (and supervillains) pop from the page. From glow-in-the-dark sharks to immortal jellyfish and tiny cats with lethal aim, Super Small shows readers that just because you are small, it doesn't mean you aren't super--and sometimes being small can be super in and of itself"--, provided by publisher"Did you know that some of the smallest creatures on Earth have real-life superpowers? The minute oribatid mite can lift more than 1,000 times its own weight. A tiny type of salamander (called an axolotl) can regrow body parts. And the almost microscopic tardigrade? It can survive practically anywhere, even in outer space! ...From glow-in-the-dark sharks to immortal jellyfish and tiny cats with lethal aim, Super Small shows readers that just because you are small, it doesn’t mean you aren’t super--and sometimes being small can be super in and of itself"--Amazon
Target audience
juvenile
Classification
Mapped to