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From YouTube: San Bruno Library Livestreaming Storytime June 25, 2020
Description
Welcome to San Bruno Public Library Storytime on Thursday June 25, 2020 with Miss Barbara! Our next storytime will be Tuesday June 30, 2020 with Miss Raqui right here on the City of San Bruno YouTube Channel. If you subscribe, you will be notified when we go live, or you can always find the link to our next storytime at storytime.sanbrunolibrary.org, and many eResources for kids at kids.sanbrunolibrary.org! This storytime is intended for the private use of this audience only and is not for commercial distribution.
B
B
So
today
we
are
going
to
be
talking
about
dinosaurs
and
digging
and
I'd
like
to
give
a
special
shout
out
to
San
Bruno
virtual
camp
kaleidoscope,
participants
as
well
as
mr.
B
and
Miss
Clara
T's
summer
school
class
and
the
students
at
Bel
Air
elementary
school.
It's
and
all
our
faithful,
storytime
Watchers
good
to
see
you.
So,
let's
see
I
have
a
nametag
this
morning
and
I
don't
have
a
dinosaur
cut
out,
but
I
have
a
dragonfly
cut
out,
and
that
is
an
ancient
insect
that
was
around
at
the
time
of
the
dinosaurs.
B
So
there
you
go
all
right.
So
today
we're
going
to
read
actual
size,
we're
going
to
learn
about
a
superscientist,
we're
going
to
wonder
if
we
had
a
pet
we're
going
to
imagine
being
really
big
and
then
we're
gonna
talk
about
digging
a
hole
with
a
hole
just
too
big
and
I
have
some
great
rhymes
and
songs
for
you,
including
the
rainbow
song
and
some
new
dinosaur
rhymes.
So
let's
get
started
we're.
A
B
Trying
to
show
them
at
their
actual
size,
so
animals
have
lived
on
earth
for
hundreds
of
millions
of
years,
dragonflies
the
size
of
seagulls,
meat-eating
dinosaurs,
bigger
than
a
bus,
giant,
flying
reptiles,
fierce
predatory
birds,
eight
feet
tall,
they
all
appeared,
thrived
for
millions
of
years
and
then
died
out
as
the
world
changed
around
them.
In
this
book,
you'll
see
what
these
prehistoric
animals,
along
with
many
others,
may
have
looked
like
at
actual
size.
Oh,
this
is
the
artists
idea
of
what
they
look
like.
This
is
the
loss.
Eruptor
Velociraptor
was
a
swift,
agile,
predator.
A
B
Our
pied
sea
scorpion
hunted
in
shallow
seas
420
million
years
ago.
Let's
see
this
one
five
fifty
and
we
still
have
protozoans.
Today
the
tiny
spiny
shark,
one
of
the
first
fishes,
was
protected
by
armor
plate
and
sharp
spines.
Four
hundred
and
ten
million
years
ago,
the
dip
localist
was
a
meat-eating
amphibian.
That
means
it
was
to
live
in
the
water
and
on
land.
Its
horns
may
have
helped
it
glide
through
the
water
300
million
years
ago.
B
B
B
B
A
B
B
B
A
A
B
Use
your
claws,
grumble
and
growl,
just
like
Tyrannosaurus
on
the
prowl,
very
good.
Okay
super
scientists.
You
know
that
lately
I've
been
reading
you
some
stories
about
real
people.
I'm,
just
gonna
tell
you
really
a
little
bit
about
this
real
person.
Who
is
a
dinosaur
hunter?
Her
name
was
Mary
Anning,
and
this
book
is
called
super
scientists,
40
inspiring
icons
and
it's
by
Ann
Blanchard
illustrated
by
Tino,
and
it's
published
by
cuarto
publishing,
wide-eyed,
editions
and
I'm
happy
to
be
able
to
share
it
with
you.
B
Mary
Anning
Mary
Anning
lived.
She
was
born
in
1798
a
long
time
ago
and
she
died
in
1847.
So
she
lived
more
than
a
hundred
years
ago,
one
of
a
handful
of
amateur
science
scientists
who
advanced
science
so
amateur
means
that
it
was.
She
wasn't
like
a
professional.
Let's
see
how
should
I
say
she
spent
her
life
doing
this
work,
so
she
kind
of
was
a
professional,
but
she
didn't
have
a
fancy
degree
or
like
fancy
science,
titles.
So
I
guess
that's
why
they
call
her
an
amateur
Mary.
Anning
must
not
be
forgotten.
B
She
was
an
orphan
and
survived
by
collecting
fossils
on
the
beaches
of
England,
the
beaches
of
Lyme
Regis,
which
is
a
town
in
England
on
the
south
coast
of
England
and
selling
them
to
tourists.
When
she
found
a
rare
fossil
of
a
marine
reptile
called
a
pliosaur,
she
helped
prove
a
vital
argument
that
explained
how
living
things
had
evolved,
dinosaur,
specialist
or
paleontologist
see
any
standings
discoveries
is
very
important
and
call
her
the
fossil
hunter.
B
He
was
awarded
a
pension
for
her
work.
That
means
she
got
some
money
every
year,
other
work
and
she
spent
her
time
patrolling
the
beaches.
Looking
for
fossils
in
the
cliffs
and
the
sand
here
is
the
pliosaur
fossil
and
she
lived
her
life
doing
this
work,
leading
tours
showing
people
how
to
find
fossils
themselves
and
she
had
a
shop
where
she
talked
to
many
people
from
all
over
the
world.
About
fossils
and
her
work.
B
B
Scientists
began
to
give
dates
to
rocks
and
fossils
after
the
discovery
of
uranium
in
all
living
things.
Uranium
is
a
chemical
element
that
deteriorates
over
time,
so
the
amount
of
uranium
still
in
the
rock
tells
us
how
old
it
is.
So
that's
how
they
found
out
how
old
the
fossil
was.
It's
just
a
little
bit
about
Mary
Annie,
there's
lots
and
lots
of
books
about
her
that
you
can
read.
Okay,.
A
A
Ever
see
a
Dino
Dino
Dino
did
you
ever
see
a
Dino
stomping
its
feet
and
then
we're
gonna
wiggle,
our
tails
wheel,
its
tail.
Did
you
ever
see
a
Dino
Dino
Dino?
Did
you
ever
see
a
Dino
wailing
tail?
Let's
do
that
whole
thing
again.
Did
you
ever
see
a
Dino
Dino
Dino?
Did
you
ever
see
a
Dino
munching?
It's
lunch,
it
munches
and
crunches,
and
crunches
and
munches.
Did
you
ever
see
a
dino
munching
its
lunch?
Did
you
ever
see
a
Dino
Dino
Dino?
A
A
B
Many
many
many
verses
to
that
all
right.
Our
next
story
is
called
if
I
had
a
raptor.
No,
we
could
have
a
discussion
about
whether
this
is
really
the
bird
Raptor.
So
a
raptor
today,
just
plain
Raptor
is
any
kind
of
bird
of
prey
like
an
eagle
or
hawk
or
an
owl.
Those
are
all
called
Raptors,
but
we
also
know
we
have
the
dinosaur
the
Velociraptor
and
we
saw
in
our
book
actual
size
that
some
people
thought
that
they
had
betters.
B
So
we
could
have
a
discussion
about
whether
this
is
just
a
big
bird
of
prey
or
whether
this
is
a
dinosaur
for
today.
I
am
deciding
it's
a
dinosaur.
So
if
I
had
a
Raptor
by
George
O'connor
and
it's
published
by
candlewick
press
and
I'm
so
happy
to
be
able
to
read
it
to
you,
there
were
no
free
Raptors.
B
A
A
B
B
A
B
A
B
A
B
A
A
Must
be
Diplodocus,
what's
that
Russell's
in
the
brush
gotta
be
my
Hardwick.
A
Look
I'm
too
heavy
for
speed,
can't
run
what
do
I
do
hide
tree
not
wide
enough
hole,
not
deep
enough
Rock
way
too.
Small
can't
hide
what
do
I
do
fight
bangs
all
spikes,
whose
Ghanim
not
me
can't
fight.
What
do
I
do.
Thank
you
think,
think
big
don't
mess
with
me.
Carnivores!
A
A
B
B
A
A
A
It's
as
yellow
as
yellow
can
be
rainbow
rainbow
rainbow
Romy
rainbow
rainbow
rainbow
around
me,
and
the
grass
outside
my
window
is
as
green
as
green
candy
little
Biddy
upside
my
window,
it's
as
green
as
green
can
be,
and
the
Sun
is
as
yellow
as
yellow
can
be
rainbow
rainbow.
We
will
round
me
rainbow
rainbow
rainbow
round
me
and
the
sky
outside
my
window.
A
B
A
B
B
B
A
B
B
B
B
Rugs
are
so
dogs
have
not
since
a
hole.
It
is
for
a
mouse
to
live
in
a.
B
B
A
B
Okay,
why
does
that
look
like
on
the
hand
that
looks
like
it's
like
that?
I
can't
wait
to
see
you
in
person
and
really
put
a
real
stamp
on
your
hand.
That's
gonna
be
a
while
yet,
but
thanks
for
sharing
this
time
with
me,
I'll
talk
to
you
soon,
we'll
have
story
time
with
Miss
Rakhi
next
week.
We're
gonna
have
story
times
about
story
time
about
a
day
in
the
park
and
we're
really
excited
for
that
too.