Home Geography for Primary Grades eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 62 pages of information about Home Geography for Primary Grades.

Home Geography for Primary Grades eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 62 pages of information about Home Geography for Primary Grades.

LESSON XXV.

FORMS OF LAND AND WATER.

You all know what a pond is.  Is there a pond near where you live?  Did you ever fish in it?  Did you ever walk round it?

When a stream, on its way to the ocean, flows into a basin or hollow in the land, the water spreads out and fills it.  A hollow in the land filled with water is called a lake, or, if it be quite small, a pond.

What is a lake made of?  What is round it?  Suppose some one who never saw a lake were to ask you what a lake is, what would you say?

What do we find in lakes?  Would you not like to sail on a lake?

In the hollows among mountains are great numbers of beautiful lakes.  In their clear waters may be seen the mountains, the forests, and the sky, as in a looking-glass.  At night the moon and stars may be seen below you as plainly as above.

Here is a picture of a pretty lake in a valley.

[Illustration:  A PRETTY LAKE IN A VALLEY.]

You see a river flowing from the hills beyond.  Into what is it flowing? 
The river that lets the water into the lake is called an inlet.

You see another river that lets the water out of the lake.  This river we call the outlet of the lake.

Make a lake on your molding-board, or in the sand near your home. 
Represent its inlet and outlet.

Out in the lake is a little piece of land round which the waters play.  We could not go to this land without crossing the water; the water is on all sides of it.  Such a little piece of land is called an island.

Did you ever read the story of Robinson Crusoe?  You will remember that he went up a hill in search of water.  When he got to the top of the hill, he saw that he was on an island.  How did he know?

Have you ever seen an island?  What island was it?  Could you sail round it?  What was on every side of it?  What grew on it?  What is an island?

If there is a brook or lake near your home, how can you make an island?

Opposite is a picture of a river and a lake.  Make a map of the same river and lake on your slate.  Notice how the coast or shore of the lake bends in and out.

Write the following

A lake is water surrounded by land.

The land near the water of a lake is called its shore.

An island is a little piece of land surrounded by water.

LESSON XXVI.

MORE ABOUT FORMS OF LAND AND WATER.

[Illustration:  PICTURE OF A PENINSULA.]

An island, as we have learned, is a piece of land with water all round it.  Now, sometimes we see a piece of land that has water nearly all round it.  This form of land is called a peninsula.  The word peninsula means almost an island.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Home Geography for Primary Grades from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.