Chomp! Was inspired by the game Kaboom! And by the OCEARCH Global Shark Tracker. Play along and learning interesting facts about your favorite apex predators!
Use this map to practice plotting pings as you track your favorite sharks! Tracking sharks is a great way to study migratory animals and talk about the marine food chain. Where is the shark? Why are they there? Where will they go next?
The less plastic we can use the better for the environment. In order to encourage others to use less plastic and encourage people to use reusable or recyclable materials, we encourage adults and children to make a pledge, create a poster, and educate others about how to take care of the ocean and planet so it has a healthy future.
Use the Scientific Method to make a hypothesis, prediction, make a plan, gather data and draw conclusions about wherected and why sharks tagged by OCEARCH are migrating where they are around the world!
You can learn shark biology and do math at the same time! Learn that sharks have 5 or more pairs of gill slits, then count and draw the gill slits that each shark has!