We've produced a number of factsheets on a range of topics from Animal Facts to Environmental facts as part of our commitment to encouraging young people's understanding of the environment and of the need for sustainability.
Loading Resources, Please Wait...Counting the animals 2 by 2...
Biomass is a versatile energy source. Organic matter that is used as a source of biomass energy includes trees, timber waste, wood chips, corn, ric...
Read MoreThroughout history the suns heat has been used as a form of energy – in the beginning it was used to cook food. Then we learnt to collect the sun’s...
Read MoreOf the four living groups of reptiles, only one, the snakes and lizards is represented in Britain. Reptiles bodies are covered with scales. Lizards...
Read MoreThe name 'rhinoceros' comes from ancient Greek and means 'horned nose'. There are only 5 species of rhino left making them one of the most endanger...
Read MoreOn 20 June 2012 many young people, scientists, academics, politicians and others met at a very special event in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Read MoreIt seems that almost every day there is another story about pollution of one form or another, in the food we eat, the water we drink and the air we...
Read MoreRivers can run for many hundreds of miles. The longest river in the world is the Nile in Africa. It is 6,700km long. The longest river in Britain i...
Read MoreThe robin is a popular visitor to gardens and is well-known for its tameness. In the winter they will regularly visit a bird-table to eat kitchen s...
Read MoreSand lizards are among the UK's rarest reptiles. They are the only egg-laying lizard species in the UK.
Read MoreThere are around 400,000 plants species recorded in the world and many more waiting to be discovered and named.
Read MoreThe grey seal is Britain's largest native seal species, being bigger (and slightly confusingly more numerous) than the common or harbour seal. Its ...
Read MoreThe Harp seal can be found in both coastal waters or on pack ice, from the Gulf of St. Lawrence and across the Arctic to Siberia.
Read MoreThe leopard seal is so-called because of its spotted markings and leopard-like ferocity. They live mainly in the sea and on the pack ice around the...
Read MoreIt seems that almost every day there is another story about pollution of one form or another, in the food we eat, the water we drink and the air we...
Read MoreA rocky shore consists of rocky ledges with pools of salty water, boulders and pebbles. Living in this habitat is a community of hardy plants and ...
Read MoreThe plants that feed us, and that feed other animals on the planet, have all grown from seeds. Where do these seeds come from, and who owns them?
Read MoreLike its larger relative, the Cormorant, the shag is a member of the pelican family. It spends more time on the coasts and out at sea than the Corm...
Read MoreThe great white shark has long had a reputation as a fearsome 'man-eater' and is probably the most feared of all animals that live in the oceans.
Read MoreThe common shrew is one of Britain's smallest mammals and is closely related to the mole and hedgehog.
Read MoreThe water shrew is the largest of the five species of British shrews and like all shrews leads a hectic life, busy by day and night on the look-out...
Read MoreAlthough it looks a bit like a snake, the slow worm is actually a legless lizard
Read MoreAfter the king cobra, the black mamba is the longest venomous snake in the world. It is also the fastest-moving snake in the world, reaching up to ...
Read MoreThe fer-de-lance's name means 'spearhead' in French. It is the most dangerous snake of Central and South America, and causes more human deaths tha...
Read MoreKing cobras are active by day and night, but are rarely seen. They hunt by smell, 'tasting' the air with their forked tongues to track their prey.
Read MoreSmooth snakes are extremely rare in this country and you are unlikely to see one. They live only in a few isolated areas of heathland in Southern E...
Read More