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LOST CITY The Discovery of Machu Picchu

LOST CITY The Discovery of Machu Picchu. Compiled by: Terry Sams PES. By Ted Lewin. Study Skills. Genre: Narrative Nonfiction Comprehension Skill: Compare Contrast Comprehension Strategy: Visualize Comprehension Review Skill: Sequence

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LOST CITY The Discovery of Machu Picchu

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  1. LOST CITY The Discovery of Machu Picchu • Compiled by: • Terry Sams PES By Ted Lewin

  2. Study Skills • Genre: Narrative Nonfiction • Comprehension Skill: Compare Contrast • Comprehension Strategy: Visualize • Comprehension Review Skill: Sequence • Vocabulary: Word Structure – Greek and Latin Roots

  3. Summary Professor Hiram Bingham goes on a journey to Peru to find the lost city of Machu Picchu. With the help of a farmer named Arteaga and a Quechua boy, Bingham finds something unexpected -- the beautiful city of Machu Picchu sitting among the clouds.

  4. Genre: Narrative Nonfiction (Different PowerPoint on Genre) Narrative nonfiction can tell the story of a real event such as the discovery of a lost city. The details of the event are presented in sequence so that readers can understand the cause-and-effect relationships.

  5. Comprehension Skill Review: Compare andContrast – TE538 • A Comparison tells how two or more things are alike. • A Contrast tells how they are different • Clue words such as like, same or as show similarities. • Clue words such as but, different, or unlike show differences.

  6. Compare and Contrast PB 213 3. Rome was a huge empire. 2. They both produced great poets and artists. 4. Rome had more advanced building methods 5. _____________________________________________________________

  7. Comprehension Skill- Sequence Pg. 551 • Sequence means the order in which things happen. • Dates, times, and clue words such as first, then, next, and last can help you understand the order of events. • Sometimes two or more events happen at the same time. Words such as meanwhile and during can show this.

  8. Vocabulary Strategy – Greek and Latin RootsPg. 540 • Many English words have Latin or Greek roots. • For example, the Latin word terra means “earth, land.” Part of it appears in words such as terrain and territory. • The Latin word gloria means “praise”; part of it appears in words such as glorify, meaning “to praise.” • You might be able to use Latin and Greek roots to help you figure out the meaning of an unknown word.

  9. 1. What is the Latin word for terraced? terra – it has to do with land 2. How does the root in glorious… it means “praise” 3. What do you think terrain means?... refers to ground you walk on – “land” 4. It does not make sense . . . it refers to something worth of praise 5.Write a sentence. . . ________________________________ Practice Word StructurePB215

  10. Grammar Review – Comparative and Superlative Adjectives TE 559e-f • A comparative adjective compares two people, places, things, or groups. Add –er to most short adjectives. Use more with longer adjectives. This mountain is taller and more beautiful than that one.

  11. Grammar Review – Comparative and Superlative Adjectives TE 559e-f • A superlativeadjective compares three or more people, places, things or groups. Add –est to most short adjectives. Use most with longer adjectives. It was the highest and most amazing city he had ever seen.

  12. Study Skill – Outline TE 559L • Outlining helps you understand text structure and remember information. • An outline is a plan that show how a story or other text is organized. • You can also you an outline to organize your thoughts before you write something of your own. • Outlining information can also help you prepare for tests.

  13. Study Skill – Outline TE 559L • The title is listed at the top of the outline. • Topics are the most important ideas. They are identified with Roman numerals. • Subtitles are listed under a topic and tell more about it. They are identified with capital letters. • Details are listed under a subtopic and tell more about it. They are identified with numbers. • Let’s look at PB 219 and 220.

  14. Practice Outlines Machu Picchu (Title) I. In the Past (Main Idea) A. The Inca People (Subtopic) B. The End of the Inca C. The Legacy 1. Architecture (details) 2. Artifacts 3. Roads II. Modern History A. Rediscovery 1911 B. C.

  15. Comprehension StrategyVisualize Pg. 538 • Good readers visualize as they read. • This means they create pictures in their minds. • Sensory words such as sticky and crackle can help you experience what you are reading.

  16. Weekly Fluency Check -Phrasing TE 559a • Grouping words that go together and making corrections if you make mistakes helps listeners to understand a selection better. • Break up long sentences by grouping related words into meaningful phrases. • Echo read the last paragraph on p. 544.

  17. Question of the WeekTE 488L • What surprises can happen on an expedition?

  18. Day 2-Question of the Day • Why do you think Hiram Bingham was willing to go on such a difficult expedition?

  19. Day 3 - Question of the Day • What are some of the difficulties and satisfactions in the life of an archeologist?

  20. Day 4-Question of the Day - Review How is visiting Machu Picchu today different from the trip Hiram Bingham made?

  21. Other Things • More about Machu Picchu • Photo Essay of Machu Picchu • Web Quest • Great PowerPoint on Machu Picchu • Machu Picchu - How They Kept the Secret • More on the Incas • Inca Trail Map

  22. Review Questions • Why might so few people have known about the ruins? • What might have happened before the boy had a dream about the stranger? • What did Bingham see after he found the sun temple? • Make a generalization about the Incas from what you have learned in this story. • Why did the author include the boy’s thoughts?

  23. Review Questions • What did the boy call the camera? Why? • What is the main idea of the selection? • How was the author’s search for the ruins different from Bingham’s? • How would you describe the journey to Machu Picchu? • How are Cusco and the first capital of the Inca alike? Different?

  24. Vocabulary - Say It • thickets • torrent • terraced • curiosity • glorious • ruins • granite

  25. More Words to Know remote rugged ventured adobe highland terraces

  26. torrent a violent, rushing stream of water

  27. thickets bushes or small trees growing close together

  28. curiosity an eager desire to know or learn

  29. formed into a flat, level land with steep sides; terraces are often made in hilly areas to create more space for farming terraced

  30. glorious magnificent; splendid

  31. ruins what is left after a building, wall, etc., has fallen to pieces

  32. granite a very hard gray or pink rock that is formed when lava cools slowly underground

  33. out of the way; secluded remote

  34. ventured dared to come or go (to a new or unknown place)

  35. rugged covered with rough edges; rough and uneven

  36. adobe built with bricks made from clay baked in the sun

  37. highland related to a region that is higher and hillier than the neighboring countryside

  38. terraces flat raised levelsof land with straight or sloping sides. Terraces are often made one above the other in hilly areas to create more space for raising crops.

  39. Archeologists have curiosity about people who lived long ago.

  40. Archeologists have curiosity about people who lived long ago.

  41. They had to cut their way through jungles with thickets full of dangerous animals.

  42. They had to cut their way through jungles with thickets full of dangerous animals.

  43. Professor Bingham discovered the lost ruins of Machu Picchu.

  44. Professor Bingham discovered the lost ruins of Machu Picchu.

  45. What looks like rocks to us might be a glorious sight to a scientist.

  46. What looks like rocks to us might be a glorious sight to a scientist.

  47. The terraced fields on the side of the mountain were for growing crops.

  48. The terraced fields on the side of the mountain were for growing crops.

  49. Granite cliffs rose thousands of feet above the river.

  50. Granite cliffs rose thousands of feet above the river.

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