Martha E. H. Rustad - Dogs
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- Book:Dogs
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- Publisher:Capstone
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- Year:2015
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Dogs: summary, description and annotation
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1710 Roe Crest Drive, North Mankato, Minnesota 56003
www.capstonepub.com Copyright 2015 by Capstone Press, a Capstone imprint.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be
reproduced in whole or in part, or stored in a retrieval system,
or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic,
mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without
written permission of the publisher. The name of the Smithsonian Institution and the sunburst logo
are registered trademarks of the Smithsonian Institution.
For more information, please visit www.si.edu. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Rustad, Martha E. H. H. H.
Rustad.
pages cm. (Smithsonian little explorer. Little scientist)
Summary: Simple text and colorful images introduce young
readers to information about dogs Provided by publisher.
Audience: Ages 4-7.
Audience: K to grade 3.
Includes index.
ISBN 978-1-4914-0791-2 (library binding)
ISBN 978-1-4914-0795-0 (paperback)
ISBN 978-1-4914-0793-6 (paper over board)
ISBN 978-1-4914-0797-4 (eBook PDF)
ISBN 978-1-4914-7494-5 (eBook) 1. DogsJuvenile literature. 2. 3.
Working dogsJuvenile literature. I. I.
Title.
SF426.5.R87 2015
636.7dc23 2014000186 Editorial Credits Michelle Hasselius, editor; Sarah Bennett, designer; Kelly Garvin,
media researcher; Tori Abraham, production specialist Our very special thanks to Don E. Wilson, PhD, Curator Emeritus
of the Department of Vertebrate Zoology at Smithsonians
National Museum of Natural History, for his curatorial review.
Capstone would also like to thank Kealy Wilson, Smithsonian
Institution Product Development Manager, and the following
at Smithsonian Enterprises: Ellen Nanney, Licensing Manager;
Brigid Ferraro, Vice President, Education and Consumer
Products; Carol LeBlanc, Senior Vice President, Education and
Consumer Products. Image Credits Corbis/AP, 22 (top); Dreamstime: Alexander Raths, 27 (top),
Jagodka, 5 (bottom), John Roman, 8 (top), Mary Katherine
Wynn, 11 (bottom), Monika Ondrusova, 10 (top), Russ Ensley, 25,
Sunheyy, 14, West7megan, 11 (top); Newscom/Andrew Gombert,
19 (right), IP3 Press/MaxPPP, 23 (top), Element Films/Album, 23
(bottom); Shutterstock: Andraz Cerar, 24 (top), Anneka, 28 (top),
Annette Shaff, 20 (left), Antonio Gravante, 27 (middle), Artem
Kursin, 21 (top), BaileyOne, 29 (top), Castka, 24 (bottom), Close
Encounters Photography, 12 (bottom), cynoclub, 7 (top left), Dora
Zett, 28-29 (bottom), Emiliallngur, 13 (top), Eric Isselee, 13 (bottom
left), 21 (bottom), Fedor Selivanov 16 (top), fotostory, 8 (bottom),
Golden Pixels LLC, 13 (bottom right), Holly Kuchera, 5 (middle),
Ian Rentoul, 5 (top), Igor Normann, 10, iofoto, 9 (bottom), Javier
Brosch, 4 Liliya Kulianionak, 3, Linn Currie, 7, Margo Harrison,
24 (middle), Matt Hayward, 12 (top), Mastak A, (bone, paw print
art), ntnt, (dog silhouette art), Pavel Hlystov, 18, Phase4Studios,
30, photo2life, 32, Pukhov Konstantin, 16 (bottom), Rainer
Lesniewski, 22 (bottom), Raywoo, 19 (left), siamionau pavel,
26, siloto, 15, Smit, 10 (bottom), Stanislav Duben, cover, Tom
Biegalski, 20 (right), violetblue, 27 (bottom), VKarlov, 17, yuris, 6
(top), Zuzule, 1; Superstock: Belinda Images, 9 (top), Kevin Oke/
All Canada Photos, 6 (bottom) For Jay, Shane, Daisy, Prince, Rex, Spook, and Freya. MEHR
A dog is so happy to see its owners when
they get home.
in the same animal family. Dogs and people have lived
together for thousands of years. The first pet dogs helped
people hunt. Today dogs are friends
and helpers. The first
pet dogs lived
33,000 years ago.
In ancient Egypt it was common
for a king or queens favorite
dog to be buried with the ruler. pharaoh hound
many different jobs. Farm dogs herd animals.
They run fast around sheep,
cows, or goats. Barks and
nips tell the animals where
to go. Herding dogs keep animals
away from danger.
dogs find lost or
trapped people.
They use their
noses to follow
peoples scents.
dogs find lost or
trapped people.
They use their
noses to follow
peoples scents.
Police dogs keep
people safe. They
smell for bombs
and drugs.
who are blind. They look
for safe places to walk. Therapy dogs visit
hospitals and nursing homes.
People sometimes feel better after petting a dog.
by smelling
each other.
Dogs pant to cool off. Smelling, hearing, and touching
are strong dog senses. A dog learns a lot from its nose.
Dogs gather smells from the
air and the ground. Their sense of smell is about
10,000 times better than ours.
important too. Owners pet
their dogs to show love.
Whiskers help dogs feel
objects close to their faces. Dogs hear better than people do.
Their ears sense high sounds. Dogs move their ears to tell
where a sound comes from. Seeing and tasting
are two weak dog
senses. Colors look
dull to dogs.
squirms and squeals.
Newborn puppies cannot
see or hear. They drink milk
from their mothers. Puppies lose 28 baby
teeth. Adult dogs
have 42 teeth.
leave their litter when they are
6 to 8 weeks old.
Most dogs
are fully
grown by
their first
birthday. HAPPINESS IS A WARM PUPPY. Charles Schulz, creator of
the Peanuts comic strip
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