News Bites - National Geographic Kids

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October 2009 Archives

Tuesday, October 27, 2009
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What Is Daylight Saving Time, Anyway?

Photo: Clockmaker Scott Gow touches up a large replica clock in 2003Photograph by Lisa Poole, AP


Daylight saving time ends for most of the U.S. on November 1. But why do we change our clocks by one hour in the spring in the first place? "In the early 19th century ... localities set their own time," said Bill Mosley, a public affairs officer at the U.S. Department of Transportation. There was no standardized time until train travel became common. The U.S. railroad industry established time zones with standard times in 1883, and Congress made the railroad's system a law in 1918. The next year, the decision of whether or not to observe daylight saving time was left up to individual jurisdictions.

Some places, like American Samoa, Hawaii and most of Arizona, don't mess with Father Time. For those places that do observe it, though, the law says that people must set their clocks back to standard time at 2:00 a.m. on the first Sunday in November. This Sunday, the sun will set an hour earlier. The switch to daylight saving time again on the second Sunday in March "adjust[s] daylight hours to when most people are awake and about," Mosley said. During daylight saving time months, there's less light in the morning and more light in the evening. Although more light in the evening isn't helpful to everyone (like farmers), research shows that longer daylight hours decrease traffic accidents and crimes.

When updating legislation in the 1980s, Congress noted that daylight saving time has many benefits, including "more daylight outdoor playtime for the children and youth of our Nation."

Read more about daylight saving time on National Geographic News.

Read about atomic clocks on National Geographic News.

Spend your extra hour this weekend reading a book! Get recommendations from other kids on the DogEared Books Blog.

Read about an invention that wakes you up with bacon on National Geographic Kids.
 
Thursday, October 22, 2009
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Largest Web-Spinner Found

Nephila komaci is the world's largest web-spinning spider. Or at least the female is! Her legspan can be as big as five inches (12 centimeters) wide. The males, however, is less than a quarter of the female's size. Males have legspans that are only one inch wide (2.5 centimeters). There are bigger spiders on the planet (think tarantulas like the goliath birdeater), but they don't spin webs.

Nephila komaci is a member of the golden orb-weaver family. All of these spiders are known to spin very big webs. They can be up to three feet (one meter) wide! The spider's habitat is limited--it lives in small areas in Madagascar and South Africa. Although the spider was first identified at a museum in 2000, scientists didn't know if it still existed in the wild until a field survey in 2007.

Read more about Nephila komaci on National Geographic News.

Put together puzzles featuring spiders on National Geographic Kids.

Get the facts on tarantulas in the Creature Feature.
 
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
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Chimps Help Each Other

Chimpanzees are more like humans than researchers previously thought. In a new study performed in Japan, chimps helped other chimps get juice by passing them objects such as straws (to drink the juice) or sticks (to reach straws they couldn't reach). Researchers noticed that related chimps were more likely to help each other.

The chimps were trained to use sticks or straws to get juice, but they were not trained to pass things to each other.



Find out more about the research on National Geographic News.

Get the facts on chimpanzees in this Creature Feature.

Watch a video of a chimp solving a computer puzzle on News Bites.
 
Friday, October 16, 2009
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Big Cats Initiative

Photo: A lion in the grassPhotograph by Beverly Joubert


Africa's lion population is quickly getting smaller and smaller, and action must be taken immediately to save these majestic animals.To raise awareness, the National Geographic Society launched the Big Cats Initiative this month. This project will support programs and education that will help the big cats of the world, with a special focus on lions.

Dereck and Beverly Joubert are one of the big forces behind the project. They are National Geographic Explorers-in Residence who have spent over 25 years studying and working to conserve Africa's animals, especially the big cats. They want people to understand that when it comes to saving the big cats like lions and leopards, the time to act is now. ""We no longer have the luxury of time when it comes to big cats," Dereck says.


Learn more about the Big Cats Initiative on National Geographic.

Get the facts on lions on National Geographic Kids.

Play Crittercam: African Adventure on National Geographic Kids.
 
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
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Vegetarian Spider

Photo: An adult female Bagheera kiplingiPhotograph by Robert L. Curry


Did you know that there are more than 40,000 species of spiders, but only one species is known to be vegetarian? The jumping spider is named Bagheera kiplingi after the character of Bagheera the panther in Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book.

Bagheera kiplingi lives in Mexico and Costa Rica and eats the buds that grow on acacia plants. Ferocious acacia ants live in the acacia's hollow thorns and defend the plants from intruders such as Bagheera kiplingi. The spider must leap from thorn to thorn to collect its food while avoiding the ants, according to Christopher Meehan the biologist who led the study. "It is utterly surreal to see a spider use such effective hunting strategies to hunt a plant," he added.

Read more about this plant-loving spider on National Geographic News.

Put together puzzles featuring spiders on National Geographic Kids.

Watch a video of a jumping spider on National Geographic Kids.
 
Friday, October 9, 2009
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NASA "Bombs" the Moon

Illustration: In an artist's conception, NASA's LCROSS probe sends its spent Centaur rocket hurtling toward the moon. LCROSS mission picture courtesy NASA


This morning, NASA's LCROSS (Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite) intentionally crashed into the moon's surface in hopes of uncovering traces of ice near the moon's south pole. The impact created a crater of about 100 feet (300 meters) wide and scattered 200 tons of material on the moon's surface.

Impacts on the moon aren't unusual. Other objects similar in size to LCROSS, such as meteors, hit the moon every month and more than two dozen NASA objects are already scattered across the moon's surface.

Learn more about the LCROSS crash on National Geographic News.

Check out pictures of moon exploration on National Geographic Kids.

Quiz Your Noodle and find out how much you know about the moon on National Geographic Kids.

Play Pluto's Secret on National Geographic Kids.

 
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
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Bat Rescue

Photo: Baby flying foxes with bottlesPhotograph by Newspix/Rex USA


Violent storms can be disastrous for baby flying foxes in Australia. Strong winds can knock the babies from the protection of their mothers' wings, and many have not learned how to fly. Luckily for the bats, there are volunteers to swoop in and rescue them.

One particularly fierce storm sent hundreds of baby bats helplessly to the ground. Over three days, volunteers transported the babies to the Australian Bat Clinic & Wildlife Trauma Centre. Doctors at the clinic treated the bats for injuries and broken bones and monitored them until they learned to fly.

Read the full story by Scott Elder in the October 2009 issue of National Geographic Kids, on newsstands now.

See a video of flying foxes on National Geographic Kids.

Read a story about Dunia, a rescued baby gorilla, on National Geographic Kids.
 
Friday, October 2, 2009
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Oldest Human Ancestor Skeleton Found

Illustration: "Ardi"
The oldest known fossil skeleton of a human ancestor--a female Ardipithecus ramidus specimen nicknamed "Ardi" (pictured)--has been found, scientists revealed yesterday.

The find reveals that our ancestors underwent a previously unknown stage of evolution more than a million years before Lucy, the early human ancestor specimen that walked the Earth 3.2 million years ago. Ardi lived 4.4 million years ago, according to researchers.

See more pictures, a map, and read a report of the discovery on National Geographic News.

Learn more from Science magazine.

Illustration courtesy J. H. Matternes via Science/AAAS
 

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