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Meet A Scientist

Click Magazine for Kids

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September 2017

Dr. Erin P. Riley is an anthropologist, a scientist who studies the ways that humans, apes, and monkeys live, act, and learn, both long ago and now. Lately, she’s been studying monkeys called moor macaques on the island of Sulawesi in Indonesia. Here’s what she told Click about her work.

- Rachel Young

Meet A Scientist

CLICK: Why did you start studying monkeys, Erin? Was it because they’re so cute?

ERIN: It was more because they’re so active and interesting! In school, I was very curious about ancient people and civilizations. I thought I would become an archaeologist, digging up old cities. But when I went on my first archaeological dig, I could tell right away it wasn’t for me.

CLICK: Why not?

ERIN: Archaeologists work very slowly. They stay in the same spot all day, carefully sifting through dirt to uncover broken bits of ancient treasures. I wanted to be more active. Following monkeys through the forest is more my speed!

CLICK: What’s it like to work in the forest?

ERIN: Sometimes people think I just walk into the forest and monkeys magically appear, like in a movie! But it can take days of hiking through hot and buggy forests to find monkeys to study. And even when my team and I find a group, we have to wait for them to get habituated.

CLICK: Habituated? That’s a word I’ve never heard before!

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All around North America, kids and adults are looking for ladybugs. When they find a ladybug, they take its picture. Then they send the picture to scientists. Why? For the Lost Ladybug Project.

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Science Magic

These activiti es may seem magical, but science is what makes them work.

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The Great Scientific Cookie Caper

“There’s smoke pouring out of the oven!” Lucas yelled. 

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Build It High, Long, Strong

A wooden plank across a small stream makes a fun bridge.

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February 2017

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Helping Pandas

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May/June 2017

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Turtle Rescue

At first, Stella thought the turtle was a seashell. Small and round, no bigger than Stella’s ear, the tiny turtle lay motionless in the sand.

time to read

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May/June 2017

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Night And Day

When the side of Earth where you live faces the sun, you have daylight, and the other side of the world is in darkness, or night.

time to read

1 mins

July/August 2017

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Reaching For The Moon

The name my parents gave me was Edwin Eugene Aldrin Jr., but the name my sister gave me was the one that would stay with me all my life. She could not manage to say brother, only “Buzzer.” Later that got shortened to “Buzz,” and no one ever called me anything else.

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July/August 2017

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Hello, Sunshine!

It’s me! The sun. I’m up here in the sky. But don’t look right at me.

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