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<title>GLOBIO > Glossopedia > Featured Articles</title> <link>http://www.globio.org</link>
<description>Glossopedia, is a free, safe, multimedia online interactive encyclopedia, connecting kids to the world by supporting explorations of nature, animals, science, and culture.</description> <language>en-us</language> <copyright>Copyright 2007 GLOBIO.org</copyright> <managingEditor>info@globio.org (GLOBIO)</managingEditor> <webMaster>webmaster@globio.org (GLOBIO)</webMaster>  <item>
	<title>Seals</title>
	<link>http://www.globio.org/glossopedia/article.aspx?art_id=52</link>
	<description>Have you ever heard of a double agent? It&apos;s
  someone who leads a double life as a secret agent, or spy for two different
  sides. Seals aren&apos;t spies, but they do live double lives. They&apos;re mammals that
  live important parts of their lives on land and other parts entirely in the
  water. They breed and care for their babies on land, but spend most of their
  lives in the ocean. </description>
	</item> <item>
	<title>Stars</title>
	<link>http://www.globio.org/glossopedia/article.aspx?art_id=56</link>
	<description>For thousands of years, human beings have
  looked into the night sky and wondered about what they saw. What were the sparkling
  objects above? How did they move? How far away were they? Were they all the
  same? Over time, stories were told about the night sky. The stories turned
  into myths and legends. Observations were also made about the night sky. These
  observations were the beginnings of astronomy. </description>
	</item> <item>
	<title>Skates and Rays</title>
	<link>http://www.globio.org/glossopedia/article.aspx?art_id=47</link>
	<description>What do you see in your mind when you hear
  the word &quot;fish&quot;? Maybe you imagine a long sleek shape with short
  fins leaping out of a lake or ocean. Many fish look
  like that, but certain ones look very different. They&apos;re flat and shaped
  like a kite. They have eyes on top of their heads. Their fins stretch from
  the sides of their heads to the end of their bodies, giving them their diamond
  shape. And, you won&apos;t usually find them on the surface. They live way
  below, on or near the ocean floor. These fish are called skates and rays.</description>
	</item> <item>
	<title>Caribou</title>
	<link>http://www.globio.org/glossopedia/article.aspx?art_id=54</link>
	<description>Have you ever seen a deer in the woods? Was
  it a male or a female? If it had antlers, it was male. But with caribou, you
  can&apos;t tell by the antlers. Both males and females have them. Caribou
  live in North America, Europe, and Asia. They are the only species of
  deer that have been domesticated,
  or tamed, by humans. </description>
	</item> <item>
	<title>Lemurs</title>
	<link>http://www.globio.org/glossopedia/article.aspx?art_id=49</link>
	<description>Frisky, bright-eyed lemurs rule the treetops
  of the tropical
  rainforest. Wild lemurs live only on Madagascar, a large island off the
  east coast of Africa, and on the nearby Comoros Islands. Lemurs vary greatly
  in size and appearance. The pygmy mouse lemur, for example, looks like a mouse
  and weighs about as much as a slice of bread, 30
  g. It is the smallest species of
  lemur. The largest lemur, the indri, is about the size and weight of a large
  house cat, 7
  kg. It looks like a skinny black-and-white giant
  panda bear. </description>
	</item> <item>
	<title>Giant Panda</title>
	<link>http://www.globio.org/glossopedia/article.aspx?art_id=1</link>
	<description>The giant panda is a medium-sized black-and-white
  bear that lives only in the mountainous temperate forests of southwest China.
  Giant pandas eat a diet of bamboo. The giant panda is one of the most endangered animals
  on Earth. Only about 1,600 of these rare bears are left. This number includes
  more than 160 pandas living in zoos and breeding centers around the world,
  mostly in China.</description>
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