Tuesday, October 11, 2022

Waiting on Wednesday: Meltdown: Discover the Earth's Irreplaceable Glaciers and Find Out What You Can Do to Save Them by Anita Sanchez

Meltdown: Discover the Earth's Irreplaceable Glaciers and Find Out What You Can Do to Save Them by Anita Sanchez. Illustrated by Lily Padula. Workman Publishing Company, November 1, 2022. 9781523509508.

Waiting on Wednesday features a non-fiction/ informational title I'm interested in reading and adding to my middle school library collection. Meltdown: Discover the Earth's Irreplaceable Glaciers and Find Out What You Can Do to Save Them by Anita Sanchez will release on November 1.

Publisher synopsis:

Meet the glaciers—before they disappear. Meltdown: Discover Earth's Irreplaceable Glaciers and Learn What You Can Do to Save Them is a kids’ guide to the glorious but endangered world of glaciers. Glaciers may not be as well-known as rain forests or coral reefs, but they are just as vital to the health of the planet, and just as threatened by climate change. 

Packed with information, grounded in the latest science, with lively writing and illustrations throughout (including graphs, charts, infographics, photographs, and full-page art), Meltdown gives readers an eye-opening overview of glaciers and how important they are: There are over 100,000 glaciers covering 10% of earth’s landmass, that hold almost three-quarters of the planet's fresh water, and act as protective shields to cool the atmosphere and combat climate change. We learn how glaciers were formed (some over two million years ago), how they move and carve the planet's landscape, and how scientists study them (the bluer the ice, the older it is). We learn the secrets of earth’s climate history hidden deep in a glacier’s core—and discover how climate change is causing glaciers to melt at unprecedented rates, putting the health of the planet in jeopardy.

But we are not left without hope. The final chapter offers positive steps readers can take to become climate activists, reduce their carbon footprint, and save the glaciers.


No comments:

Post a Comment