ection>
Children are naturally curious about the world around them, and
curiosity is a powerful motivation for reading. Studies show that
informational reading is critical to success in school. National
Geographic Kids Readers allow you to feed your children’s interests
and create readers who not only can read, but also want to read!
To sustain children’s excitement about reading, we have created a
special program called NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS SUPER READERS.
As kids read each National Geographic Kids Reader, they cross
off its picture on a free National Geographic Kids Super Readers
poster that parents can download from kids.nationalgeographic.com/ superreaders.
Throughout the process, kids and parents go to the website and
download specially designated prizes that reward their effort. Kids
can have even more reading fun online, with lively book-related
activities, quizzes and games, fascinating excerpts, and sneak
previews of upcoming books.
The National Geographic Kids Super Readers program appeals to
kids’ love of accomplishment while providing them with incentives
to keep reading. When the reading experience is fun, children learn
more and achieve more. What could be better than that?
Sincerely,
Mariam Jean Dreher
Professor of Reading Education
University of Maryland, College Park
For Dad, a geologist and a rock in my life —J. M. G.
Copyright © 2017 National Geographic Partners, LLC
Published by National Geographic Partners, LLC,
Washington, D.C. 20036. All rights reserved. Repro-
duction in whole or in part without written permis-
sion of the publisher is prohibited.
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC and Yellow Border Design
are trademarks of the National Geographic Society,
used under license.
Designed by Amanda Larsen
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Galat, Joan Marie, 1963- author.
Title: Erupt! : 100 fun facts about volcanoes /
Joan Marie Galat.
Description: Washington, D.C. : National
Geographic Children's Books, 2017. | Series:
National Geographic kids fact readers |
Includes index. | Audience: Age 6 to 9. |
Audience: K to grade 3.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016051354 (print) | LCCN
2017016844 (ebook) | ISBN 9781426329128
(e-book) | ISBN 9781426329111 (hardcover) |
ISBN 9781426329104 (paperback)
Subjects: LCSH: Volcanoes--Juvenile literature. |
BISAC: JUVENILE NONFICTION / Readers /
Beginner. | JUVENILE NONFICTION / Science
& Nature / Earth Sciences / Earthquakes &
Volcanoes.
Classification: LCC QE521.3 (ebook) | LCC
QE521.3 .G357 2017 (print) | DDC 551.21--dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc .gov/2016051354
Photo Credits
Cover, Stephen Belcher/Minden Pictures; 1, Arctic-
Images/Getty Images; 3, DU BOISBERRANGER Jean/
hemis.fr/Getty Images; 4 (UP), Dan Ballard/Getty
Images; 4 (LO LE), rtem/Shutterstock; 4 (LO RT), Prof.
Stewart Lowther/Science Photo Library/Getty Images;
5 (UP), Grant Dixon/Getty Images; 5 (CTR LE), Toshi
Sasaki/Getty Images; 5 (CTR RT), Jiri Hera/Shutterstock;
5 (LO), Jonathan Blair/Getty Images; 6–7, Salvatore
Allegra Photography/Getty Images; 9, photoDISC; 11,
Stuart Armstrong; 12, Kevin Thrash/Getty Images; 13,
Mary Van de Ven/Getty Images; 14 (LE), Chris Bickford/
National Geographic Creative; 14 (RT), MichaelUtech/
Getty Images; 15 (UP), Auscape/UIG/Getty Images;
15 (LO), Santiago Rodríguez Fontoba/Dreamstime;
16–17, Buena Vista Images/Getty Images; 18, Fotos593/
Shutterstock; 19 (UP), bilwissedition Ltd. & Co. KG/
Alamy Stock Photo; 19 (CTR), Herbert K. Kane; 19 (LO),
Culture Club/Getty Images; 20–21, G. Brad Lewis/Getty
Images; 22, Hans Strand/Getty Images; 23, Roger
Bacon/Reuters/Alamy Stock Photo; 24 (LE), Toshi
Sasaki/Getty Images; 24 (RT), filmlandscape/Getty
Images; 25, Eachat/Getty Images; 26–27, Matthew
Oldfield/Science Source; 28, Martin Bernetti/AFP/
Getty Images; 29, Calvin Hall/Getty Images; 30, Athit
Perawongmetha/Getty Images; 31, G. Brad Lewis/
Getty Images; 33, Ron Dahlquist/Getty Images; 34 (LE),
Harry Taylor/Getty Images; 34 (RT), everything possible/
Shutterstock; 35, Gary Hincks/Science Source; 36,
atese/Getty Images; 37 (UP), Chris Clor/Getty Images;
37 (LO), Eric Isselée/Shutterstock; 38, Detlev van
Ravenswaay/Science Source; 39, NASA/JPL/University
of Arizona; 40, Jacques Langevin/Sygma/Sygma via
Getty Images; 41 (UP), Cosmin Manci/Shutterstock;
41 (LO), Leigh Marsh; 42–43, Blueplace/Getty Images;
44 (UP), vvoe/Shutterstock; 44 (CTR), Evans/Getty
Images; 44 (LO), Somchai Som/Shutterstock; 45 (UP),
MarcAndreLeTourneux/Shutterstock; 45 (CTR), Hilary
Andrews/NG Staff; 45 (LO), NASA images/Shutterstock;
various (top border of page), T.Thinnapat/Shutterstock
National Geographic supports K–12 educators with ELA Common Core Resources. Visit natgeoed.org/commoncore for more information.
25 Hot Facts About Volcanoes 4