Meet the Illustrator
Esther Baran
Baran still remembers the powerful effect an N. C. Wyeth-illustrated edition of Treasure Island had on her as a child. She attempts to recreate that dynamic feeling in her audience through her artwork. An avid reader, Baran often finds herself illustrating in her imagination the scenes she finds in books. Baran finds inspiration for her work in the natural world, particularly animals, and in folktales from various cultures.
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Earth in Action: Theme Connections
Within the Selection
1. Why does Old Gentleman raise the flag at his castle?
2. How does Jiya survive the big wave?
Across Selections
3. What details in "Earth: The Elements" help explain factors behind the formation of the big wave?
4. How does the "stone wind" in "Volcano" compare to the big wave?
Beyond the Selection
5. How does "The Big Wave" add to your understanding of the theme Earth in Action?
6. What do you think Jiya will do next? Why?
Write about It!
Imagine you are a survivor of the big wave. Write a journal entry describing your ordeal.
Remember to look for information related to tsunamis and the destruction they cause on the Concept/Question Board.
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Science Inquiry: Tsunamis: Prediction and Protection
Genre
Expository Text tells people something. It contains facts about real people, things, or events.
Feature
Sequence Diagrams show the order in which things happen or the steps in a process.
Tsunamis often wash away towns and coastlines. They can kill thousands of people instantly. Others may die later of hunger, thirst, or disease.
Flooding can leave disease and despair behind in the wreckage . Many people are never found, and the survivors' lives are changed forever. With proper warning, however, many can escape with their lives. In the event of a tsunami, minutes can mean the difference between life and death, and hours can allow some to protect their property.
For years, scientists have been trying to develop a tsunami warning system. Three steps are required for such a system to work. The first step is to predict the tsunami. Tsunamis are usually caused by earthquakes under the ocean floor. While scientists do not yet have the technology to predict an earthquake, scientists are alerted to ground motion after an earthquake has started. Some time elapses between an earthquake and the tsunami it causes. This gives scientists time to predict where and when the tsunami will hit land.
Tsunamis often hit land thousands of miles from the epicenter of the earthquake. One earthquake can send tsunamis in several directions.
After making the prediction, the next step is to warn the people who will be affected. Scientists need to send this information to decision makers. Emergency messages must be sent out immediately. The third and final step is to protect lives. Decision makers must respond urgently to information about tsunamis.
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As of 2006, three major tsunami warning systems were in operation. The first system, located near Honolulu, Hawaii, warns of tsunamis in the Pacific Ocean. Another is made up of five scattered warning systems: two in the United States, one in Japan, one in Russia, and one in French Polynesia. The third system is made up of local warning systems in Chile and Japan.
One thousand land-based seismometers are part of the warning system in the United States. Seismometers measure movement in the ground. Some scientists think that deep-water instruments should be added to the system, which could help find tsunamis in the open ocean.
Tsunamis will always have devastating effects on the land and on human settlements. Even so, improved technology, communication, and planning can save many lives.
Think Link
How does the sequence diagram help you understand the main idea of this selection?
Why can scientists better warn people about tsunamis than about earthquakes?
Think about a coastal city located in the United States. Suppose scientists predicted that a tsunami would hit that area within four hours. During those four hours, what steps should government leaders take? What should the public do? What should relief organizations do?
Try It!
As you work on your investigation, think about how you can use sequence diagrams to organize your information.
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Vocabulary: Warm-Up
Read the story to find the meanings of these words, which are also in "The Big Rivers":
delta
frontier
minor
nuisance
precipitation
basin
tributaries
average
navigation
channel
Vocabulary Strategy
Word Structure
Greek and Latin roots can often help you when you encounter an unfamiliar word. For example, the word navigation comes from the Latin root nav, which means "ship."
My family came to this delta when I was only eleven. Traveling through the frontier was a challenge. Sometimes what bothered me most would be a minor nuisance , such as a biting insect. At times we ran into so much precipitation we could not travel.
As the days passed, we journeyed down a gentle slope. We reached a point where we could see the land start to rise again many miles ahead. We seemed to be walking down into a huge basin alongside a wide river. In the basin several tributaries joined the river we had been following. As the tributaries came together, the river became larger and began flowing faster.
The days stretched into weeks. Dad was sure we would find the mouth of the river sooner or later. He explained that the mouth of a river was usually surrounded by a fertile delta.
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After what seemed like weeks, the river finally began to wind. Just as Dad had told me, it flowed through a huge delta. When we reached the mouth of the river, Dad said we would settle there.
Other settlers had come before us. They explained that the land was rich indeed because the river carried fertile sediment throughout the delta.
Over the years, most of our family has stayed here. My daughter has her own farm. My younger son runs a boat. The river is the most important means of transportation in the region. A small city has grown up, and the river mouth is an important shipping port.
My son needs to be an outstanding boat operator. Because much of the water is too shallow for the average boat or barge, navigation in the river can be tricky. The river channel has been dug deep enough for boats like his. The navigation charts show the channel. It is marked by floats so the boats can stay in the deepest part of the river. I am glad we settled here. It was definitely worth the trip.
Game
Stretch Out Write a sentence that includes all the vocabulary words and still manages to make sense. Exchange sentences with a classmate to see how the sentences differ. See if you can help make each of the sentences more focused.
Concept Vocabulary
The concept word for this lesson is cycle. Cycle means "a repeating series of events or stages." How does cycle connect with the theme Earth in Action?
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The Big Rivers
Genre
Narrative Nonfiction blends elements of fiction with elements of nonfiction in order to tell a more compelling story.
Comprehension Strategy: Clarifying
As you read, monitor the text (and yourself) to ensure that you fully understand what you are reading. Clarify unfamiliar words and concepts that hinder comprehension.
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written and illustrated by Bruce Hiscock
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Focus Questions
How are distant places like West Virginia and Montana connected? What role do rivers play in Earth's water cycle?
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Spring is an uncertain time for people who live near the big rivers: the Missouri, the Mississippi, and the Ohio. These rivers cross the center of the United States, and each spring when the snow begins to melt and the rains return, the rivers start to rise. Small streams may swell quickly from the runoff, but the big rivers react in slow motion. The swirling water comes up quietly, steadily, and with enormous power. Then families watch from the riverbanks, hoping the water will not rise too fast and bring another disastrous flood.
When spring arrived in 1993, no serious flooding was expected on the big rivers. It had been an average winter, and the snow that remained was not especially deep.
Out West, in cattle country, a brilliant March sun was melting the snow on the mountains of Montana. Ribbons of icy water ran down the slopes to form brooks and roaring streams that flowed into the beginning of the Missouri River. The big river rose gently as the water began its long journey to the sea.
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Farther east, in Minnesota, it was raining. A steady patter of cold drops fell on the fields and forests, and splashed on the highways. The ground was still soggy from thawing snow, so the rain could not soak in. Instead, it ran along the surface, carrying with it bits of soil, salt, and fertilizers. The rainwater filled the ditches and then found its way through the swamps and creeks to the upper part of the Mississippi River.
In the hills of West Virginia, the snow was already gone. There, a school was visiting an electric power plant on the Ohio River. Before getting on the bus, everyone used the bathrooms and everyone flushed, like thousands of other people in the valley. That water was now flowing past them as a tiny part of the third big river, the Ohio.
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West Virginia is a long way from Minnesota or Montana. But within a few weeks the water from those distant places came together near the center of the United States.
The waters met there because the middle of the country is shaped something like a giant saucer. The Rocky Mountains form one rim of the saucer and the Appalachians another. In between, the land slopes gently inward. The three big rivers and their tributaries, the rivers that flow into them, drain this huge area of thirty-one states and a part of Canada. These rivers carry water from rain and snow plus the waste water that comes from farms, towns, factories, schools, and homes toward the center of the saucer. There the Missouri and the Ohio join with the upper Mississippi and become one great river, the Father of Waters, the mighty Mississippi. The Mississippi then flows south to the Gulf of Mexico, the lowest spot on the saucer's rim.
This is the third largest drainage basin in the world. Where so much water comes together, floods are fairly common. Nearly every year some stretch of river will overflow its banks. Most of these floods are minor, but a few times each century enormous floods occur.
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As spring continued in 1993, the ice broke up in the North, and there was some flooding. But before long, barges were again carrying coal down the Ohio and wheat on the Mississippi and Missouri. Farmers began their spring planting. Kids talked about summer vacation and swimming. Stories of the last big flood, in 1973, were like ancient history to them, and not even their parents suspected what was coming.
A long time ago, when the country was mostly wilderness, floods were not a problem. If a river rose above its banks, the water simply spilled out onto the floodplain, the flat land that lies next to the river channel. For a while the floodplains became shallow lakes.
When the river went down, the shallow lakes drained back into the riverbed. The flooded land was a muddy mess after the water receded, but the soil was actually improved by the silt the river left behind. This is why the floodplain, or bottomland as it is sometimes called, makes such good farmland. Indians grew crops of corn, squash, and beans there long before European explorers even found the rivers.
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As settlers moved west, however, things began to change. There were few roads in that part of the land, and so the rivers, where big catfish and sturgeon swam, served as the best routes to the frontier. As the river traffic increased, towns like Louisville, New Orleans, and St. Louis were built on the banks.
By the mid-1800s, the country was growing fast, and fancy steamboats hauled cotton, lumber, and other goods up and down the broad rivers. Where Indians had grown a few crops in the black dirt of the bottomlands, farmers now planted large fields.
The spring floods became a nuisance to boats, a danger to river towns, and the enemy to farmers. And so, people began to think of ways to control the big rivers.
Levees, artificial high banks of earth, were built along the rivers to protect the farms and towns on the floodplain. Later, dams were constructed across the Missouri, and also on many tributaries. These dams were designed to hold back floodwaters, to generate electricity from the flow of the river, and to store water for irrigation, that is, water used to grow crops on the dry prairies.
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EVAPORATION The sun's energy changes liquid water into water vapor (steam).
CONDENSATION As the water vapor rises, it cools and changes back into liquid water droplets (clouds).
PRECIPITATION The cloud water falls to Earth as rain, snow, sleet, or hail.
RETURN The rainwater flows down rivers and back to the ocean.
Some rain soaks in and becomes part of the groundwater.
Other dams and locks were built on the upper Mississippi and the Ohio to make sure the navigation channel would always be nine feet deep. That is just deep enough for the rafts of barges, called tows, that now carry most river freight, and the powerful boats that push them.
The control of the rivers began with a few levees in the 1800s. By 1993 there were hundreds of dams and thousands of miles of levees guarding against floods.
As spring turned into summer that year, it began to rain hard in the Midwest. Rain is the lifeblood of rivers and a part of the water cycle. All rivers are created from water that evaporates, mostly from the ocean, and then falls back on the land as rain and snow. The water then flows down the rivers to the ocean, completing the cycle. When the weather is normal, the rivers can easily handle the flow, and the water cycle goes on without much notice.
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But in the summer of 1993, the normal weather pattern in the Midwest changed. Humid air, full of moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, streamed north creating massive thunderstorms as it clashed with cool air from Canada. This "rain machine" stalled over Iowa, Missouri, and neighboring states, drenching some places with two to five inches of rain each day. At the same time along the Ohio River, where it is usually quite rainy, the weather was dry.
In late June, flooding started in Minnesota and Iowa sending the first crest of high water down the Mississippi. A warning call went out. Levees were checked. Supplies of sandbags and sand were prepared. Families who lived in low areas got ready to move.
Then, as if to tease everyone, the rain slacked off for a while, only to come back harder than ever. The lower Missouri River pushed over its banks, flooding thousands of acres of farmland with two or three feet of water.
People began to build dams of sandbags to save buildings close to the river. Volunteers, including kids and grandparents, turned out to help. National Guard troops and prison crews were brought in as the rain continued.
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Smaller rivers rose quickly now. The surging Raccoon River in Des Moines, Iowa, flooded the water purification plant despite the seventeen-foot-high levee protecting it. In Des Moines, there was water everywhere, but none of it was fit to drink.
Along the Mississippi, a record flood was building, and the rain would not stop. Families moved their couches and refrigerators upstairs, and then left their homes, taking whatever they could. In many river towns the neighborhoods without levees were covered with water by mid-July.
Still the rain kept coming. Riverbanks caved in, and whole trees were swept along in the swift current as the water rose. Soon the river was nearing the top of the long levees that guard the farms on the floodplains. Radio stations asked for more people to help sandbag, and more volunteers came.
They worked in the heat and the rain, filling woven plastic bags with three shovel-scoops of sand, and then hoisting them on a truck or boat or helicopter to take to the levee. Restaurants donated pizza, sandwiches, and tacos for the workers. Cases of canned water arrived from beer and soft drink companies. It was hard labor, but the volunteers kept at it, and the wall of sandbags grew along miles and miles of levees.
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The work went on until the sandbags were piled high. But the earthen farm levees were never meant to hold back the river this long, and they were dangerously weak. Each night, crews walked quietly along the levees, checking for seepage and patching the leaks with straw and sandbags. The power of Old Man River in flood is overwhelming. One by one the farm levees failed, and the river spilled in, covering green fields of corn and soy beans with brown, muddy water.
Near the cities, the levees were higher and stronger. At St. Louis, where the Mississippi and Missouri meet, the water rose to almost twenty feet above flood stage, but the concrete floodwall, built for twenty-two feet, held, and most of the town stayed dry.
The flooding was some of the worst ever seen on the Missouri and Mississippi rivers. Over one hundred thousand homes, stores, and factories were flooded, along with vast areas of farmland. People and animals were drowned. Miles of roads and railroad tracks were washed away. Bridges were closed. Plants that treat waste water became overloaded from the rain, forcing towns to let raw sewage flow into the rivers. Since many towns take their drinking water from the rivers, extra precautions were needed to make the water safe to use.
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The great flood of '93 lasted longer than most floods -- over a month in some places. But eventually the storms ended, and then the enormous job of cleaning up the smelly, soggy mess began. It wasn't much fun, but floods have always been a part of life along the river.
Fortunately the dry weather continued in the eastern United States. This cut back the flow of the Ohio River, which usually carries twice as much water as the Missouri and upper Mississippi combined. And so there was room for extra water in the broad channel of the lower Mississippi River, downstream from the Ohio. When the floodwater coming down from St. Louis reached that point, it went back to the riverbed. From there on, the Mississippi stayed within its banks and levees, and the southern states were not flooded at all.
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As the muddy water flowed south toward the sea, it followed the winding course of the lower Mississippi. There the big river meanders in great looping bends over a floodplain many miles wide. In years past, the river would sometimes cut a new channel across one of the bends leaving the old bend behind as an oxbow lake. Towns that were shipping ports could be left miles from the river by these sudden changes in the channel.
Now all the big river channels are fixed and controlled. The United States Army Corps of Engineers is in charge of keeping the rivers in place. The network of dams and levees works well against smaller floods. A flood the size of the 1993 disaster is only expected once every few hundred years.
Farther south the river flows past fields of cotton and corn. Then in Louisiana, the riverbank farms are replaced by chemical plants and petroleum refineries. Here the river channel has been dredged deeper to allow ocean-going tankers to come upstream. After passing New Orleans, the Mississippi finally reaches the sea.
When the big river enters the ocean it drops millions of tons of sand and soil--the fine silt it always carries. Over the ages this river sediment has formed an enormous delta of marsh, beach, and dry land at the mouth of the river. In fact, much of Louisiana is actually river delta, land created from soil brought by the river from the plains and prairies to the north.
The water that returns to the ocean down the big rivers has gone through the water cycle countless times, for most water is billions of years old. It has fallen as rain on mountains that no longer exist and traveled down rivers that humans never saw. Perhaps the water in your faucet once flowed in the Congo or the Amazon, or was gulped by a dinosaur. This constant recycling of water is the source of all rivers. All life on this watery planet, including us, depends on this endless cycle.
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Meet the Author and Illustrator
Bruce Hiscock
Hiscock has always loved nature and science.
He explored deep forests and snowy fields while growing up in Michigan and Alaska. After studying chemistry at the University of Michigan, Hiscock worked as a chemist. Hiscock thought about writing a children's book, but it took him many years to realize that he should be an author and artist. Now Hiscock travels the world researching his books. He always carries a sketchbook and watercolor set just in case. He lives in Porter Corners, New York, in a house he built to inspire his work.
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Earth in Action: Theme Connections
Within the Selection
1. How does the shape of the United States influence the flow and direction of the big rivers?
2. What effect did the "rain machine" have on the Midwest in 1993?
Across Selections
3. Where in the system of big rivers could you find the wetlands described in "Earth: The Elements"?
4. Are volcanic eruptions easier to predict than floods? Why or why not?
Beyond the Selection
5. What are ways you can help victims of natural disasters?
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