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Camel and Elephant from Nimm mich mit!

Smithsonian Libraries and Archives

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No Copyright - United States
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Object Details

Creator

Meggendorfer, Lothar

Book Title

Nimm mich mit!

Caption

Camel and Elephant.

Educational Notes

The camel may be a desert animal today, but its origins are a bit chillier! The Camelid family has been around since ancient times, and though the modern camel only lives in the desert, its ancestors lived in much colder weather in the Arctic! As ancient camels moved south into hotter, dryer lands, they adapted, or went through the evolutionary process in which an organism becomes better suited for its habitat. Some adaptations can be seen like the camel’s long lashes that protect their eyes from bright sunlight, and other adaptations can’t be seen like the way their metabolism has changed to help them survive if food and water isn’t available. One of the camel’s biggest changes is their humps on their backs that store fat and provide energy when food is scarce, but this adaptation wasn’t developed for camels to use in the desert. The camel hump evolved much earlier in their evolution to help them survive in the cold, which shows how useful adaptations can turn out to be!

Date

1900

Publication Date

1900

Image ID

SIL-nimmmichmit00megg_0165

Catalog ID

523260

Rights

No Copyright - United States

Publication Place

München

Publisher

Braun & Schneider

See more items in

See Wonder

Data Source

Smithsonian Libraries

Topic

Biology
Zoology
Camels
Mammal
Dromedary camel
Hump
Energy
Evolution
Natural Selection
Adaptation
Metabolism
Ancient
Desert
Habitat

Metadata Usage

CC0

Record ID

silgoi_103999

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